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Facebook removes Scrabulous, sort of

July 29th, 2008  |  by jz  |  Published in Facebook, Future of the Internet, Web 2.0 platforms  |  1 Comment

The NYT is blogging that Facebook has removed Scrabulous.  Trying to get there through Facebook shows:

Scrabulous is disabled for US and Canadian users until further notice. If you would like to stay informed about developments in this matter, please click here.

The app is apparently doing IP geolocation to see whom to turn away; when I visit Facebook from a British IP address I can get to Scrabulous perfectly well.  In this sense Facebook hasn’t done anything, except perhaps tell Scrabulous that it had better shut out the North Americans or risk having Facebook kill the app entirely. Instead, Scrabulous itself appears to be taking the action.  The “click here” link in the message to North Americans curiously links to an IP address rather than a domain name — http://74.54.87.73/facebook/updateme.php — which contains a form for people to put in their email addresses for updates from the Scrabulous founders.

It’d be great to learn more about the dynamics among Scrabulous, Facebook, and Hasbro.  I’ll see what I can glean.

–JZ

Responses

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  1. ignorance says:

    July 29th, 2008 at 2:31 pm (#)

    The gist of it seems to be that game rules can’t be copyrighted in the United States, but if you’re making money on what someone else considers their intellectual property, all bets are off.

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About Jonathan Zittrain

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Jonathan Zittrain is Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and co-founder of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School

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