• WFP Live
  • WFP Stuff
  • WFP Celebrations
  • Passages
  • Mike on Crime

Mike on Crime

Mike on Crime
  • Articles |
  • Blog |
  • Crime Stoppers Video |
  • Books |
  • Contact |
  • Mailing List

Winnipeg Free Press

Mike

Email Mike

MIKE’S BLOG

ON WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM

  • 2010 Ultimate Caribbean Cruise
  • Crime Stoppers - Submit a Tip

JOIN

THE MIKE ON CRIME

MAILING LIST

CRIME AND PUNISHMENT

Syndicated National Radio Show with Mike McIntyre

NEW TIME

SUNDAYS 7 pm - 9 pm CST

Listen Live on cjob.com

BROWSE ARTICLES

Ask the Judge
Cold Cases
Crime and Punishment Radio Show
International Crime News
Manitoba Crime News
Mike in Books
Mike In The Community
Mike’s Bio
Mike’s Favourites
National Crime News
The Lighter Side of the Law
Voice of the Victims
Winnipeg’s Hot Cars of the Day

LINKS

  1. Mike McIntyre on TWITTER
  2. Winnipeg Free Press
  3. What If Sports Fantasy Leagues
  4. Jason van Rassel: Crime Reporter
  5. THE DOE NETWORK
  6. Peter Warren
  7. Charles Adler
  8. Amazon.ca - "To The Grave"
  9. The Smoking Gun
  10. Bouck's Law Blog
  11. Canadian Missing Adults
  12. Full Comment - National Post Blogs
  13. Great Plains Publications
  14. James Turner - The Crime Scene
  15. Manitoba Organization of Victim Assistance (MOVA)
  16. Missing Children's Society
  17. Patent and the Pantry
  18. PETITION for change to the Not Criminally Responsible legislation
  19. PrimeTimeCrime
  20. Scared Monkeys
  21. TJ's Gift Foundation
  22. Tyler Pelke
  23. Vision For Justice
  24. Winnipeg CrimeStat Program

JURY POLL

Should the federal government changes the laws to allow police to conduct random breathalyser tests?
YES. It would be an effective tool against drunk driving.
NO. It would be a violation of individual rights.

view_results

Scrabble knockoff returns to Facebook

DATE: Aug 1, 02:14 AM

By Anick Jesdanun, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – A popular Scrabble knockoff is back on Facebook – with changes that could help it skirt legal trouble.

The return came less than two days after the creators of Scrabulous blocked their version of the word game from U.S. and Canadian users of Facebook, the online hangout. The Indian brothers behind Scrabulous had pulled it Tuesday after being sued in federal court by Hasbro Inc., the owner of Scrabble’s North American rights.

Now, the game has reappeared with the name Wordscraper. The change could help it avoid any brand confusion with Scrabble, a key point in trademark disputes.

The game itself has also changed. Instead of Scrabble-like square tiles, for instance, Wordscraper has circles. The tiles earning double and triple points have been rearranged, and tiles for quadruple points have been added.

Whether those design changes will protect the creators from claims of copyright infringement remains to be seen.

Ideas cannot be copyrighted, but expressions of ideas can. The case could turn on whether Wordscraper feels more like Scrabble or a generic board game based on words.

“It’s going to come down to the little things like squares and circles and double, triple and so on,” said Ethan Horwitz, an intellectual-property lawyer at King and Spalding in New York. “What they’ve done is taking a step in the right direction, but I don’t think it’s a big enough step.”

In a statement, Hasbro said it “will evaluate every situation individually and take actions as appropriate.”

Word of the rechristened game started spreading through blogs late Wednesday, and by Thursday afternoon thousands of Facebook users already had added the application. Still, that’s nowhere near the half-million or so daily users that Scrabulous had been enjoying.

Last week, Hasbro sued Scrabulous creators Rajat and Jayant Agarwalla of Calcutta, India, in U.S. District Court in New York, claiming copyright and trademark infringement.

The lawsuit followed video game maker Electronic Arts Inc.‘s release of an official version of Scrabble for American and Canadian Facebook users under a broad licensing deal with Hasbro. That official Scrabble, still in a “beta” test mode, hasn’t been as popular.

Separately, Hasbro asked Facebook to block Scrabulous, something the site resisted despite risks of losing immunity protection from copyright lawsuits. The Agarwallas agreed to suspend Scrabulous on Facebook in the United States and Canada in deference to the online hangout, though it has remained available at Scrabulous.com.

© 2007 Winnipeg Free Press. All Rights Reserved.
The Winnipeg Free Press is a member of the Manitoba Press Council.