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No more Scrabulous. Boo Hasbro!


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The new Scrabble version is done by EA.

The lawsuit does smack of the big corp muscling around the little guy but Scrabulous was pretty much a blatant ripoff so I can't say I blame them.
 

The new Scrabble version is done by EA.

The lawsuit does smack of the big corp muscling around the little guy but Scrabulous was pretty much a blatant ripoff so I can't say I blame them.

Scrabulous was blatant trademark infringement, plain and simple. I know that the prevailing attitude on the internet is basically "screw the man," but in this case Hasbro was completely in the right. Someone was making money off of their trademark (and I believe the point/board structure is also copyrighted or trademarked) and they had to put a stop to that.

Personally, I think it was pretty nice of them to not sue until their (albeit crappy) version was done. They had no reason to hold off save for good will. Again though, "screw the man." :erm:
 

This doesn't mean anything, really. The lawsuit is apparently still ongoing; the Scrabulous people just removed it from the North American interface of Facebook. It's still up and running if you access the site from other parts of the world.
 



Heh, that didn't take long. Scrabulous is back, it's called Wordscraper. The board's a bit different and let's you make your own board. So much for trademark infringement.
 

Why do that when you can engender so much ill-will from all the people playing Scrabulous on Facebook?

There's actually a couple of very good reasons.

The first is that in buying Scrabulous, that opens the door for everyone to take Hasbro's trademark, infringe upon it, and then make money when Hasbro buys them out. Thus, there's a never-ending string of implicitly allowed trademark infringement for money. Why would Hasbro, or any company for that matter, do that when they can spend one small sum of money and lay down the law? It would be a small sum too - like as not, any lawyer would be able to win this case, since it's a clear example of trademark infringement.

The second is alluded to by the first. Suppose someone infringes on a trademark, and makes a crappy version of one of Hasbro's games, with a very similar name. It may be for the purpose of getting bought out or not. By buying Scrabulous, Hasbro has set precedent for this to be okay, and any lawyer worth their salt will argue that Hasbro can't cherry pick good applications and claim infringement on bad ones. In essence, it has to be an either/or issue. Additionally, while we'd all like to have hope for humanity and think people would be able to tell what is endorsed by Hasbro and what isn't, that never seems to end up being the case. Heck, that's a big reason why trademark was invented in the first place.

If someone coded a game called "Dungeons & Demons" that copied all of the rules of D&D and could be played online, we wouldn't be having this discussion. Scrabulous is no different - people just like to say/think it is because they enjoy it. That's too bad, Scrabulous being popular doesn't change the fact that they infringed on the copyright, and probably made money off of it.
 

Hmm... I thought game mechanics couldn't be copyrighted? I think I might want to think long and hard before I published unlicensed 4e material, were I previously inclined.
 

The new Scrabble version is done by EA.

The lawsuit does smack of the big corp muscling around the little guy but Scrabulous was pretty much a blatant ripoff so I can't say I blame them.

Scrabulous was blatant trademark infringement, plain and simple. I know that the prevailing attitude on the internet is basically "screw the man," but in this case Hasbro was completely in the right.

There was a short feature about this on Nightline earlier and I have to agree. Just a few shots shown of Scrabulous play made it pretty obvious that it was a blatant rip-off. The people who enjoyed playing it might be pissed, but I can't really blme Hasbro, especially if they're developing their own.

However, they showed some shots of what Hasbro's developing and not surprisingly, Scrabulous did look better designed.
 

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