Game Over: Suit Spells the End For Facebook's Scrabulous App

By Mike Musgrove
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 30, 2008; Page A01

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/29/AR2008072901393.html?nav=rss_technology

It came as an unwelcome surprise to many Facebook friends and bored 
cubicle dwellers yesterday: Scrabulous was gone. The popular Scrabble 
knockoff was no longer available to U.S. users of the social networking 
site.

The free game had been one of the most popular applications on the 
social networking site, but a lawsuit filed last week accused Scrabulous 
of copyright infringement.

Hasbro and Mattel, the board game companies that share global ownership 
of the Scrabble trademark, had first asked Facebook to remove the 
application in January. Hasbro, which owns the rights in the United 
States and Canada, partnered with the game publisher Electronic Arts and 
recently introduced an authorized version of Scrabble for Facebook.

It's the latest example of the Web making something popular before 
copyright issues have been settled, reminiscent of YouTube's early 
skirmishes with television networks that complained about users posting 
copyrighted content.

According to its page on Facebook, Scrabulous had 509,505 daily users, 
and even Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has said he's a fan. The 
application was launched on Facebook last year by two brothers in India 
who are not affiliated with the social networking site.

Facebook users who logged on to play the word game instead got a notice 
that the application had been "disabled for US and Canadian users until 
further notice."

Some users noted on their pages at the site yesterday that they were 
going through "Scrabulous withdrawal."

John Edgell, a public relations consultant in the District, said he 
logged on to Facebook at 7:30 a.m. to continue a match yesterday, only 
to find that the application was down.

"I was getting creamed, so it's probably a good thing in that respect," 
he said. "The country is probably 10 percent more productive today."

Though the game is still available at Scrabulous.com, Arlington lawyer 
Peter Owen said he won't be playing it there because he primarily 
enjoyed taking on acquaintances he'd rediscovered on Facebook.

"Scrabble and Scrabulous are not really about the game. . . . What makes 
them fun is the way they help me connect with the personalities of my 
friends and family," he wrote in an e-mail. "The world is a sadder, 
lonelier place today. What kind of society are we that allows such a 
thing to happen?"

The two Facebook games use the same rules as the board game. EA's 
Scrabble has slicker animation, but some fans have complained that it 
runs more slowly than Scrabulous as a result.
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