Scrabble vs Scrabulous

by billso on Tuesday, 8 July 2008

Image courtesy of allyrose18 Elec­tronic Arts is pub­lish­ing an autho­rized ver­sion of Scrab­ble for US and Cana­dian users of Facebook. It will com­pete head-to-head against the pop­u­lar Indian knock­off Scrab­u­lous, which has become a pop­u­lar pas­time on the social net­work­ing site.

The devel­op­ers of Scrab­u­lous, Rajat and Jayant Agar­walla, may face mul­ti­ple law­suits by Has­bro and Mat­tel, the com­pa­nies that pur­chased the rights to Scrabble.

The broth­ers con­tend that they are not copy­ing Scrab­ble — they are merely adapt­ing ideas for a new game. Fair use is a weak argu­ment, as Scrab­ble has been sold under license in India for sev­eral decades. Scrab­ble is also pro­tected under mul­ti­ple patents and copy­rights around the world. Scrab­u­lous uses the same num­ber of tiles found in Scrab­ble, along with iden­ti­cal point val­ues, and an iden­ti­cal game board.

The broth­ers admit­ted in this New York times arti­cle, Online Scrab­ble Craze Leaves Game Sell­ers at Loss for Words, that they are earn­ing at least US$25,000 in dver­tis­ing rev­enue from their Face­book game. Here’s a link to the Wikipedia arti­cle.

Mat­tel licensed its own Face­book ver­sion of Scrab­ble in March 2008, but the Face­book app pro­vided by Real­Net­works can­not be played by US and Cana­dian Face­book users. It’s triv­ial for Face­book to iden­tify these users, either by IP addresses or user pro­files. Has­bro owns the Scrab­ble license for the US and Canada, and has licensed the EA ver­sion for Face­book. Both Mat­tel and Has­bro con­sid­ered a set­tle­ment with the broth­ers, but the idea was aban­doned for fear of cre­at­ing a precedent. 

See this Asso­ci­ated Press story, Face­book could see a stand­off over Scrab­ble, for more details. 

Image cour­tesy of allyrose18 through a Cre­ative Com­mons license. 

Related pages on billso.com

Share

Comments on this entry are closed.

Previous post:

Next post: