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To: Howard C. who wrote (42676)4/27/1999 2:29:00 AM
From: Patricia Trinchero  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50264
 
Janice Shell may have found some trouble! Read below

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 26, 1999--Business Wire, the leading provider of up-to-the-minute commercial news to editors and the
worldwide financial community, today filed a lawsuit in federal court against three perpetrators of a recent online hoax who used Business Wire's press release
distribution services to publicize a phony investment opportunity.

The defendants, Jeffrey Mitchell, William Ulrich and Janice Shell, submitted a press release to Business Wire on behalf of a company called "Webnode" announcing
that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) had granted Webnode an exclusive contract to raise funding for the Next Generation Internet (NGI). Although the NGI
is a bona fide project, Webnode -- and its supposed contract with the government -- is a sham.

The bogus press release also included a fake solicitation for investments in "nodes" on the NGI and directed readers to the Webnode.com website where they could
learn more about Webnode and register to invest.

The defendants responded to inquiries about Webnode and collected personal information from nearly 2,000 people who believed, based on information in the
phony press release, they had a genuine opportunity to get in on the ground floor of the NGI, the lawsuit alleges.
Based on the Webnode crew's assurances that the press release was genuine, Business Wire distributed the news of Webnode's purported DOE contract over its
wire service and posted it on the businesswire.com website.

The defendants also posted the phony press release on the Webnode.com website. The defendants' false announcement, with the BUSINESS WIRE trademark
prominently displayed on the byline, was made available to millions of readers.

When Business Wire discovered the hoax, it immediately pulled the Webnode announcement from its website and notified recipients of its wire service to disregard
the announcement. Business Wire also demanded that the defendants remove the BUSINESS WIRE mark from all copies of the press release.

In response, defendants changed the byline to "BIDNESS WIRE," a name easily confused with Business Wire. The defendants only deleted the byline after
repeated demands from the company, and then began making false assertions that the company was itself involved in fraudulent investment schemes, according to
the lawsuit.

Business Wire's lawsuit alleges violations of federal and state trademark laws, fraud, breach of contract, defamation and conspiracy and seeks unspecified damages
and injunctive relief.










To: Howard C. who wrote (42676)4/27/1999 5:10:00 PM
From: RocketMan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50264
 
Hi, Howard and all, and Ouch! Bringing up old posts like that is like a nightmare Groundhog Day.

I was in LA on business last week, and got to see live the Dodger game with the two grand slams in the same inning. Not by McGuire, but by the guy who followed him in the batting order LOL

BTW, no, I did not visit Digitcom. The thought crossed my mind to drive by it, since I have never visited there, but the thought quickly left, since I am not invested in it.

WB: Way to go guy!!!

Best of luck to all still in the stock!