Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Slashdot Log In

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

Best Buy Uses DMCA To Quash Black Friday Prices

Posted by timothy on Sun Nov 16, 2003 01:57 PM
from the wouldn't-want-to-tell-you-prices dept.
Sethb writes "It looks like Best Buy didn't learn from Wal-Mart last year, and has now invoked the DMCA in order to prevent FatWallet from posting information about what items they will have on sale the day after Thanksgiving. Hopefully FatWallet will stand up for themselves again, and Best Buy will be laughed out of court."
+ -
story
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More
Loading... please wait.
  • Next Headline: (Score:5, Insightful)

    by j0keralpha (713423) * on Sunday November 16 2003, @01:59PM (#7488334)
    Major Book Publishers use DMCA to quash blurbs and book reviews!

    This law is getting just a shade ridiculous.
    • by TedCheshireAcad (311748) <ted AT fc DOT rit DOT edu> on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:08PM (#7488384) Homepage
      I wonder if it can be used to keep my grades from being released to my parents, I mean yes; they pay the tuition, but isnt the semi-unique sequence of D's and F's my copyright?

      ...Can I sue my university for even printing them? ;)
      • Re:Next Headline: (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Aadain2001 (684036) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:17PM (#7488452) Journal
        By law, Universities can not release grades to anyone but the person they belong to, not even the parents of the student unless the student give's his/her permission first. Want to keep your parents from seeing the grades? Don't send them to them.
      • by jetmarc (592741) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:57PM (#7488687)
        > I wonder if it can be used to keep my grades from being released to my parents,
        > I mean yes; they pay the tuition, but isnt the semi-unique sequence of D's and
        > F's my copyright?

        Certainly you can sue the university for circumventing your resistance to reveal
        your copyrighted and well-covered skill profile. Printing and releasing it to
        third parties qualifies the university as professional class attacker, probably
        driven by monetary or political incentives. This should be enough to arrest them
        under DMCA for at least 6 months and then sending them to Russia.
      • Re:Next Headline: (Score:5, Informative)

        by rnbc (174939) on Sunday November 16 2003, @03:01PM (#7488710) Homepage
        I don't know about the USA, but here in Portugal student's grades are public domain, by law.

        As soon as they are official they are available to anyone who cares to request them.
      • by JonTurner (178845) on Sunday November 16 2003, @07:52PM (#7490160) Journal
        >>isnt the semi-unique sequence of D's and F's my copyright?

        No. Unfortunately for me, I can claim prior art.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:00PM (#7488339)
    ill be saving lots of money by sticking with ad-busters "National Buy Nothing Day" on "black friday" and sticking up for our culture.

    or whats left of it.

    have fun at wal-mart suckers
    • by fredmosby (545378) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:26PM (#7488496)
      America has been based on consumerism for the last 50 years. Doesn't that make it part of American culture?
      • America has been based on consumerism for the last 50 years. Doesn't that make it part of American culture?

        Yes, it does. It is sad that our [American] culture is defined by consumerism as opposed to food, literature, art, music, fairy tales, and social events.

        When someone says "American Culture", what is the first thing that pops into your head? I think Coke, or something along those lines. Say "Russian Culture" and I think ballet, itsy-bitsy figure skaters, and vodka. "Italian?" Pasta mama mia! And opera. Ferrari is there, but somewhere down the list.

        Granted, cultural history here starts about 300 years ago, versus 2,000-4,000 years in much of the rest of the world. I'm not including Native Americans because we, for all intents and purposes, exterminated them. Lack of an ancient heritage doesn't have to mean that all we think about is obtaining "stuff". We can do better than this.

        On that "black friday" day, buy nothing. In fact, buy nothing (or little) whenever you can. Instead of working extra hours for money to buy christmas presents, take that time and spend it with your kids/family. Heck, make them something with your hands. They'll remember it for a heck of a lot longer than an expensive piece of anything from a store.

        </rant>
        • by Ryan Amos (16972) on Sunday November 16 2003, @06:19PM (#7489763)
          You act like consumerism is a bad thing. Consumerism is what drives economies. A steady increase in consumer spending almost inevitably leads to a boom period for the economy. When people stop consuming at a high rate, the economy heads down. It's also really, really stupid to have "buy nothing day" on the biggest shopping day of the year. The amount of money flying around on the day after Thanksgiving are so high that companies are not going to notice if a few broke hippies don't shop that day. If you want anyone to notice your stand against The Man, you should do it on a slow shopping day when more people might be willing to comply with you.

          Also, the cool thing about America is that there is no single culture. There are urban cultures, rural cultures, religious cultures, and so on. Each one draws from a different set of influences. America has no defining culture because our population is so diverse. Each culture has its own different food, literature, art, music, etc. Mexican-American culture is significantly different from Mexican culture.

          You also seem to be mixing up the iconography of a culture with the true values of a culture. I think most Italians would probably be offended if all you could think about Italy was pasta. All the Coke analogy proves is that Coke has been successful at selling their image. Everyone knows Coke is from America, whether it's an important part of our culture or not, so you just kind of make the relation.
          • by JimmytheGeek (180805) <jamesaffeld.yahoo@com> on Monday November 17 2003, @12:18AM (#7491343) Journal
            the endless pursuit of stuff is killing us and what's worse, it's making us shallower.

            I'm afraid that Coke is a pretty good shorthand reference for American culture. American cities are hidious, with maybe two exceptions (San Fran, New Orleans). The sole urban design goal seems to be the breakdown of community and conversion of citizens to consumers. We've lost a tremendous amount of personal time to work. Is that a good trade-off? What about pro-family values? Can you raise your kids from work? Once they are fed, housed, and clothed, is the delta income worth the -delta face time? Did you get a choice re: -delta face time?

            GDP is not a sound measure of societal health. I don't think it's even a good measure of economic health. Where externalities aren't monetized (you aren't charged for pollution), but cancer treatments are, you have a skewed measurement and eventually warped values. /end rant gotta get some sleep

        • by ojQj (657924) on Monday November 17 2003, @06:40AM (#7492196)
          As an American living in Germany, I'm sick of seeing American culture belittled based on false premises. You at least don't try "Americans have no culture", but your statement is still blatantly false that our cultural history is only 300 years old.

          Our history on this continent is only 300 years or so old. But our culture, just like that of the Europeans is thousands of years old. Just because our ancestors moved to a new continent doesn't mean they gave their culture up. We got our culture from our ancestors; the Europeans got their culture from their ancestors. We've changed that culture since then, the Europeans have changed that culture since then. Why should the Europeans somehow have more of a right to that culture just because they live on the same continent that our shared ancestors lived on?

          Legitimate criticism (like criticisms of American consumerism) are justified as long as clear arguments are presented to show that those are indeed features of American culture and that they are indeed harmful. The yogurt joke* is just bigotry in one of its variety of forms.

          Oh and by the way: my father spent 2 years with the Navajos and I have Cherokee indian ancestry. Native American culture has had a direct effect on the way I view the world. Stating that Native American culture has no effect on our culture today is just as inaccurate as stating that European culture isn't a part of our cultural heritage. Just as one example: did you know that the turkey, the potato, tobacco, the tomato, the pumpkin, the cranberry, corn, kidney beans, bell peppers, pecans, squash, and many other crops are American? Many dishes which are made from these foods still cannot be found in Germany today (cornbread, pumpkin pie, candy corn, sweet potato casserole, cranberry relish, pecan anything, etc.)

          *(what's the difference between a cup of yoghurt and America? -- yoghurt will eventually develop a culture)

          (end rant -- sorry. As you can imagine its an issue of some sensitivity for me.)

          • by Slime-dogg (120473) on Monday November 17 2003, @03:04PM (#7495487) Journal

            That's true. All nations still dwell within the U.S., even if they are not still within their sovreign states. The American Culture is much more than a propensity to eat sweet and fatty things, and to buy the biggest thing with the most pizzaz. The culture of the U.S. is a conglomeration of family values, community support, acceptance of differences, in addition to the food, all blended together with a "don't tread on me" attitude.

            This became most apparent after 9/11, where each U.S. citizen felt that much closer to their fellow citizen. I'm sure the Red Cross hadn't seen so much blood donated as in those following weeks, nor has New York been offered so much voluntary assistance. The Stars and Stripes became an emblem that shone on automobiles, and though the flag was treated without respect in these instances, the motivation, attitude, and intentions were sincere and honorable.

            The culture gets buried beneath things that are clearly against it's members, those things being the superior attitudes of super-commerce, the inherant human want for everything, and the supreme availability of everything to those humans. No culture goes without these problems, though. The U.S. has enemies within that treat the people like cattle being steered towards the butcher. These enemies have arisen from within the culture, but they are not of the culture itself.

            The culture of the U.S. is quite possibly the most flexible one, which is why such things can occur. Coca-Cola is not an emblem of the U.S. culture, rather it is a battle-flag of it's children. The culture supports the U.S., it thrives within each of its citizens without them knowing about it.

            The culture of the U.S. is not shallow, like many think it is. The culture is possibly more complex than any other on this Earth, precisely because of the number of lives, races, and creeds that went into building it. It has its flaws, yet it is the object of jealousy the whole world over. People look at America and thing Coke, yet people also look at America and think "freedom," "spirit," "steadfastness," and "cohesion."

      • by Saeger (456549) <farrellj&gmail,com> on Sunday November 16 2003, @03:11PM (#7488776) Homepage
        I just want to know what the hullabaloo about buy nothing day really is.

        It's to get you thinking about what the fuck you're doing with your life and the world around you.

        Why are you filling your life up with useless shit (made by slave-labor in China)? What's the point? Are you charging it to a credit card that you've never had a zero balance on? Does it make you feel happier than no-money fun with friends/family? Why is that?

        --

          • by Safety Cap (253500) on Sunday November 16 2003, @03:38PM (#7488940) Homepage Journal
            Why would you bother keeping a credit card with a zero balance on it?
            Any number of reasons:
            • You don't want to pay rent (interest) on the card, but you still want the convenience.
            • You want to use a card for the protections it offers (getting your money back in the event the product is defective or in the event that a mail-order product doesn't even exist).
            • You wish to make a large purchase and you don't wish to carry that much cash on your person
            • You want to avoid writing a check that can be later used to drain your bank account.

            Note that a debit card offers some of these protections, but the fact that your money can be tied up during an investigation makes the debit card a dangerous and unsuitable substitute for a credit card.

          • by penguinboy (35085) on Sunday November 16 2003, @04:05PM (#7489068)

            Are you charging it to a credit card that you've never had a zero balance on?

            Why would you bother keeping a credit card with a zero balance on it? If you can afford to buy stuff without credit, you don't need one.

            Why use a credit card, even if you don't need one?

            1. Easier than carrying around a stack of cash, or checks

            2. Accepted more than checks

            3. Buying online or by phone. Sure. a *few* vendors might let you mail cash, checks, or money orders, but mailing takes several days and CCs are instant.

            4. Protection. Can't charge-back with cash

            5. Records. You get a monthly itemized list of all transactions. With cash you have to keep track by hand

            6. Float. You don't have to pay until the end of your billing cycle.

            7. Building credit. You can use a credit card (without carrying a balance) to establish a good credit history for when you want larger loans (car, house) later.

            Plenty of benefits, and what would you use instead?
              • by penguinboy (35085) on Sunday November 16 2003, @04:36PM (#7489221)

                I don't quite understand your point 7. When you apply for a major credit card like Visa or MasterCard they want to know your income and any debt you might already have. Does using credit card somehow enhance one's credit rating?

                While probably not much use to someone with established credit, they're good for starting out. It's better to get a credit card and use it responsibly to prove you're worthy of other kinds of credit, than to have no history at all.

              • by willfe (6537) <willfe@gmail.com> on Sunday November 16 2003, @05:58PM (#7489650) Homepage

                Debit cards can be exceedingly dangerous, namely in that you are not offered the same protections against fraud that you are automatically provided by a credit card.

                Suppose your card is stolen and someone makes dozens of little purchases so as not to raise suspicion, or gets a fake I.D. with your name on it so he can charge up a storm. If it's a credit card, once you report it stolen, you're not liable for any of the charges made on it. If it's a debit card, real, actual money has been sucked out of your bank account, never to be seen again. Good luck getting that back. I'm not saying it's impossible, but I'm suggesting it's far more difficult.

                Saying "chargeback is handled by the shop if you have the receipt" isn't the issue; suppose the shop rips you off. Suppose you pay in advance for something with a debit card but never receive the product? What does your bank do then?

                Regarding point 7 -- credit lending is a fickle mistress, but does adhere to at least some principles:

                • When you have no credit history whatsoever, you normally cannot obtain a substantial amount of credit. A car loan (even on a new car) is about the best you can get (because it's a secured loan -- they can take real property if you default). A mortgage is usually impossible to obtain without previous credit unless you have a significant (30% or more) down payment ready to go. Generally credit is established by obtaining a fairly high-interest rate credit card with a low credit limit (say about $2,500 if you have good, verifiable income, lower if you your wages are single-digit figures per hour).
                • Your credit history is established as you charge to it and make payments every month. A common misconception is that paying off your credit card in full is noted on your credit report somehow and automatically/instantly improves your credit. This isn't quite correct, but the real effect this has is similar. See below.
                • Any decision to lend you money is taken based on your previously-established payment habits. Length of credit history is actually more important than your payment history -- your "score" goes up the longer you've had credit established. All sorts of events and ideas change your credit score:
                  • A short credit history, of less than five, even ten years, lowers your score.
                  • A missed payment (reported on your credit history; note most lenders are willing to forgive one missed payment, in the sense that if you pay it back and pay their fees, they won't report it) lowers your score.
                  • Accounts in collection, valid or not, lower your score.
                  • "Maxed out" revolving credit lines (carrying a $4,900 average balance on a $5,000 credit card line) hurts your score significantly (it is viewed as very poor money management skills since you keep the card charged up and pay only (or close to) its minimums every month).
                  • Always-zero balances lower your score slightly. Here's where normal common sense goes out the window; it's generally a "good" thing to have credit available that hasn't been used, but lenders view it as potential debt you can run up after they've lent you money. It's a risk to lend you money and require a certain payment, knowing that later you could run up another debt with an already-established credit line that could make you unable to pay for this line of credit. This is reflected as a decrease of your score.
                  • Having a long credit history but no "old" accounts (as in "card hopping" -- you get a new card every year at a lower interest rate or to take advantage of zero-fee/zero-interest transfers, and close your old cards) lowers your score. Personally I think they do this because it pisses 'em off that you're screwing them out of interest, but the official reason claimed is that you haven't established a long term reliable history with a single lender when you do this.
                  • Unsecured cash loans reduce your score. You had to borrow money, one time, from somebody, and you owe it back. The payments rarely c
  • by Sheetrock (152993) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:04PM (#7488362) Homepage Journal
    Much of a store's profits are made on strategy. When this kind of data is released, it cuts into the ability of a business to price things appropriately to the demand.

    I'm not saying the DMCA oughta cover this, but this is definitely something that can hurt business.

    • by Trepalium (109107) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:09PM (#7488391)
      Just because something hurts business (or profits, rather), doesn't mean it should be illegal.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:11PM (#7488400)
      Is it also unfair to get several quotes, or search pricewatch to compare prices ?

      Or to wait til you can get a good deal on a used one on ebay ?

      How about having an above average IQ ? That cuts into your usefulness as a consumer also.

      Just because a business thought of a way to make money, doesn't mean actions that make that way look stupid are somehow "unfair". It's just as "unfair" to not let me read all the ads before I go shopping.
      • by Herkum01 (592704) on Sunday November 16 2003, @03:54PM (#7489022)

        Customer Notice! EULA!

        To all customers entering this store you have access to private corporate information regarding prices for items that available for sale in this store. Any attempt to use this information for you own benefit, by comparision shopping or purchasing of items from a competitor, or to the detriment of this store, can be used against you in court of law as a violation of "corporate trade secrets" via DMCA!

        Thank you and have a nice visit.

    • by t0rnt0pieces (594277) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:12PM (#7488411)
      Much of a store's profits are made on strategy. When this kind of data is released, it cuts into the ability of a business to price things appropriately to the demand.

      Doesn't FatWallet have a right to make money too? Best Buy should have guarded their pricing info better. Besides, you don't think Best Buy sends people to other stores to check prices?
    • by JayBlalock (635935) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:14PM (#7488425)
      The entire basis of a (more or less) free market economy and its success is the ability of consumers to make learned, rational market decisions which are in their own interest. Advertising today, however, relies far more on trickery, psychological games, and "invisible" price hikes and drops than actually producing a quality product at a competitive price. If it is harmful to Best Buy for just their *prices* to be made public, then it means Best Buy is doing business in such a way that basically undermines the functioning of our economy.

      Much of the reason the system seems so out of wack right now is that it's the company who has the most clever advertising that wins, NOT the one actually producing the best product. And that's very destructive in the long run.

    • by k12linux (627320) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:24PM (#7488486)
      Much of a store's profits are made on strategy. When this kind of data is released, it cuts into the ability of a business to price things appropriately to the demand.

      Actually it would cause a business to more accurately price things appropriately to demand. But that's not what they want is it? They want to be able to price things above what demand would dictate so they can have higher profits. In this case they don't even want to do that.. they want to force people into the stores to find loss-leader items so they can sell them the high-profit items along with or instead of the low priced items.

      From what I remember in civics (history/government) class long ago there were no items in the Constitution or Bill of Rights which guarantee businesses high margins at the expense of other citizens. Funny how things which hurt margins (not destroy sales.. but hurt margins) in favor of the rest of society are suddenly becomming illegal in the U.S.

      I own a small business. Current US policies (even legitimate use of DMCA) don't appear to do one bit of good for small business. They only seem to help big business... which already has tons of tax breaks and other benefits none of the rest of us get.

      • Is it the primary purpose of society/government/law to protect business?

        The primary purpose of government/law is to further the advancement of society; but unfortunately sometimes we lose sight of that.
      • by GreyWolf3000 (468618) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:16PM (#7488445) Journal
        The parent says that what FatWallet does hurts businesses...and you extrapolate that by his argument, the government exists to protect business interests.

        I'm sorry, but you really jumped the gun there. He didn't say that using the DMCA in such a fashion was right (in fact, quite the opposite). He just said that businesses do have a legitimate concern in this case.

        Most corporations really aren't evil. The government does protect them (read: not the primary purpose), but that's because most businesses do a huge public service. The rest of us work for those businesses. Who else would we work for?

        • by valdis (160799) on Sunday November 16 2003, @03:27PM (#7488882)
          (IANAL, and I don't play one on TV)

          Actually, the OP is correct - facts are not copyrightable. Copyright is however held on the *compilation* and upon the *embodiment* thereof.

          17 USC 102 (b) says:
          In no case does copyright protection for an original work of authorship extend to any idea, procedure, process, system, method of operation, concept, principle, or discovery, regardless of the form in which it is described, explained, illustrated, or embodied in such work

          So finding out Mario cart 64 will be on sale and then publicizing it isn't a violation of copyright as long as they don't infringe the artwork/etc of the original. This dog won't hunt.

          Best Buy would be *much* better served by wandering over to 18 USC 1832 and arguing it's a trade secret:

          http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/18/1832.html

          18 USC 1832 (a)(2) seems a slam dunk:

          without authorization copies, duplicates, sketches, draws, photographs, downloads, uploads, alters, destroys, photocopies, replicates, transmits, delivers, sends, mails, communicates, or conveys such information;

          This dog probably *can* hunt, and I admit no clue why Best Buy didn't pursue this unless they know of some reason why it would fall through in court. Best guess I can make is that there's some reason they can't make 1832(a) stick:

          Whoever, with intent to convert a trade secret, that is related to or included in a product that is produced for or placed in interstate or foreign commerce, to the economic benefit of anyone other than the owner thereof, and intending or knowing that the offense will, injure any owner of that trade secret, knowingly -

          FatWallet could probably make the case that since Best Buy is willing to sell the gear on sale, that no injury is incurred because people wait till the sale starts to buy it. If Best Buy is injured because people buy the box at $149, they shouldn't be lowering the price from $179.
  • No scans? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by saikou (211301) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:08PM (#7488379) Homepage
    I always thought that prices per se can't be copyrighted. Now situation when people post scan of upcoming ads (which was not the case with BestBuy and FatWallet) can probably fall under copyright violation, as only author of that page can lawfully distribute it (short of posting it with design/layout critique and "never use this font in publication" kind of thing :) )

    In this particular case it's not worth it anyways, as most of the deals were easily available from other retailers for about the same price. It would be good though, to finally get those lawyers into the court and get a precedent of them being slapped with "No can't do" decision. That way any upcoming price-related DMCA cases would be still-born :)
  • by cK-Gunslinger (443452) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:14PM (#7488420) Journal

    I still have my response emails from Target, Wal-Mart, and Best Buy from last November/December when the same thing went down. They basically said, "Our prices are designed to help our customers save money and these 'hackers' are violating your rights as a consumer as well as ours. We shall defend ourselves by any means neccesary"

    What a joke.
  • by Quila (201335) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:22PM (#7488471)
    Sec. 512 F of the DMCA:

    `(f) MISREPRESENTATIONS- Any person who knowingly materially misrepresents under this section--

    `(1) that material or activity is infringing, or

    `(2) that material or activity was removed or disabled by mistake or misidentification,

    shall be liable for any damages, including costs and attorneys' fees, incurred by the alleged infringer, by any copyright owner or copyright owner's authorized licensee, or by a service provider, who is injured by such misrepresentation, as the result of the service provider relying upon such misrepresentation in removing or disabling access to the material or activity claimed to be infringing, or in replacing the removed material or ceasing to disable access to it.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:29PM (#7488510)
    Maxtor 120GB 7200RPM Internal HD w/8MB Buffer - $50 A/R
    SanDisk 256MB CF Card - $40 A/R
    SanDisk 256MB SD Card - $50 A/R
    DVD XCopy: Gold - $20 A/R
    Norton SystemWorks/AntiSpam/Firewall 3-in-1 package - $0 A/R
    Lite-On 4x Multi-Format DVD Burner - $80 A/R
    Samsung 17" LCD Monitor - $280 A/R
    ATI Radeon 9600 128MB - $70 A/R
    Sony P-10 5MP Digital Camera w/free 64MB MS - $400 A/R
    Canon Powershot A70 3.2MP w/free 64MB CF - $300 A/R
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 16 2003, @03:27PM (#7488876)
      The Simpsons Season 1, The Italian Job, Anger Mangement, Chicago, 28 Days Later, Charlie's Angels 2, The Lion King SE: $11.99 each (DVD)
      Madden 2004 (PC) - $14.99
      RCA 52" Rear Projection HDTV - $1000
      Daewoo 42" Plasma TV - $2300 A/R
      Panasonic 5.1 700-Watt Home Theatre w/progressive scan DVD player (speakers are built into stands) - $500 w/$50 free gift card
      600-Watt version of above w/o speaker stands - $350 w/free $50 gift card
      Bose 3-2-1 Home Theatre System - $900
      Pinnacle Studio 8 - $0 A/R
      MS Digital Image Suite 9.0 - $20 A/R
      Canon ZR60 MiniDV Camcorder - $300 A/R
      MAG 19" LCD Monitor - $430 A/R
      SanDisk 256MB USB Memory Key - $40 A/R
      Sony Clie SJ-22 - $100 A/R
      Casio 2.3" Handheld TV - $40 A/R
      APC 350VA UPS - $5 A/R
      FujiFilm FinePix A303 3.2MP - $150
      Maxtor 120GB 7200RPM Internal HD w/8MB Buffer - $50 A/R
      SanDisk 256MB CF Card - $40 A/R
      SanDisk 256MB SD Card - $50 A/R
      DVD XCopy: Gold - $20 A/R
      Norton SystemWorks/AntiSpam/Firewall 3-in-1 package - $0 A/R
      Lite-On 4x Multi-Format DVD Burner - $80 A/R
      Samsung 17" LCD Monitor - $280 A/R
      ATI Radeon 9600 128MB - $70 A/R
      Sony P-10 5MP Digital Camera w/free 64MB MS - $400 A/R
      Canon Powershot A70 3.2MP w/free 64MB CF - $300 A/R
  • by erroneus (253617) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:40PM (#7488583) Homepage
    Okay let's assume for a moment that these (let's call them) "lawyers" are professionals of the legal profession. This assumption would lead one to understand that these "lawyers" are reasonably intelligent, educated and keep current with the practice and application of law.

    Given that there has been prior failure of the exact same application of the law we fondly refer to as the "DMCA" and assuming they are aware of this, then it is clear that these "lawyers" are not interested in using the "DMCA" as it was intended and are instead using it as a refridgerator. (As a means to apply a "chilling effect" to anything that might seem like competition or might otherwise endanger their profitability.)

    I know I am really out on a limb here suggesting that these "lawyers" would even dream of using law for purposes it was never intended. But I'm just presenting a possible explanation for their behavior without suggesting they are morons.
  • Not Good Enough (Score:5, Insightful)

    by CarlDenny (415322) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:41PM (#7488588)
    Hopefully FatWallet will stand up for themselves again, and Best Buy will be laughed out of court.

    No, no, NO.

    If Best Buy gets laughed out of court in the middle of December, they've already won. Fat Wallet took down their ads, had to hire a lawyer, free speech was stifled.

    I am sad to see that FatWallet blinked this time, after staring down Walmart and getting them to back down. The argument that facts cannot be copyrighted seems solid, and the DMCA shouldn't change that (except for removign due proes, of course.) We need this case to go to court, and the countersuit to be pursued even after Best Buy drops it two weks after the fact.

    Fuckers.

    The only possible good outcome here is if Fat Wallet stood up, kept up the ads, and countersued.

    The DMCA doesn't change whether something is copyrightable, and facts
  • WHAT???? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mark-t (151149) <marktNO@SPAMlynx.bc.ca> on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:44PM (#7488606) Journal
    Okay, the DMCA is designed to make illegal to circumvent the copy control technology on a copyrighted work. So how, exactly, does the DMCA apply here?
  • by rabbit994 (686936) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:57PM (#7488688)
    Best Buy got sued a while back because a guy in the Washington D.C. Metro Area was shopping for a new laptop and went store to store with his old laptop writing down prices and features because he wanted the best value. Best Buy didn't allow this and even when so far as ripping off price tags. This guy took them to court for false advertising saying their attitude didn't reflect their name "Best Buy". Judge ruled in favor and said if Best Buy wanted to practice that type of behavior, they would have to post a sign in the front that said "We do not allow competive shopping". Needless to say, Best Buy changed a few things and I think the guy got a free laptop out of them to boot.
  • by acousticiris (656375) * on Sunday November 16 2003, @03:14PM (#7488797)
    General/Corporate Inquiries
    For general comments and questions about Best Buy Co., Inc., contact:

    Best Buy Co., Inc.
    Corporate Headquarters
    P.O. Box 9312
    Minneapolis, MN 55440-9312

    This story hasn't gotten a lot of attention outside of FatWallet's forums and Slashdot. If this activity bothers you, take a few minutes, write a letter, lick a stamp, and let them know you're paying attention. They are very unlikely to win if this goes to court, so they don't need a whole lot of motivation to stop the idiotic activity. I, for one, won't be patronizing their store again. I mean really, if you need your "retail" electronics fix, they have plenty of competitors who offer the same junk at the same high prices.
    Kick them a letter and thank them for making the choice of where to shop a little easier.
  • Squelch is on high (Score:5, Insightful)

    by djupedal (584558) on Sunday November 16 2003, @03:21PM (#7488844)
    'they' don't want:
    • Movie premier instant reviews
    • Book reviews/blurbs/comments
    • Black Friday pre-sale prices devulged
    • Speed trap location tip-offs
    • Arrest warrant sweeps announced
    • Car computers modified to prohibit insurance snooping
    • Stop-light camera locations mapped

    We don't want....them. Us vs. them. If 'they' trusted 'us', we might trust them. In the mean time...give 'em hell.
  • Time for mirrors (Score:4, Informative)

    by DiveX (322721) <slashdotcontact@oasisofficepark.com> on Sunday November 16 2003, @04:23PM (#7489144) Homepage
    I've already mirrored the information on my meager ISP webspace: http://web.tampabay.rr.com/mblitch/bf2003/

    Other mirrors are up. Use the example of bittorrent and help spread the load and information. I have not seen nor read any complaints from Best Buy, so I do not know what their issue may be.

    http://www.andy-akb.com/bf/

    http://www.uswebstreet.com/~cmptrdude1/default.a sp ?id=home

    http://cpanel19.gzo.com/~every/blackfriday/

    http://www.quepons.com/blackfriday.html
  • by LostCluster (625375) on Sunday November 16 2003, @04:34PM (#7489197) Homepage
    One thing to know...

    If you have advanced knowledge of what Best Buy will put on sale 2 weeks from now, you can buy that item today from them at the higher price, and then claim the 110% price protection offer they make to get an additional 10% of the discount. In fact, you can do the same to Circuit City using Best Buy's sale, or vice-versa because Circuit City has the same "price protection" policy.

    Therefore, they don't want you to be able to see their price drops coming... and that's why sale info is top secret until the day the sale goes into effect, at which point it's public info.
  • Rebate-Schmebait (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mabu (178417) * on Sunday November 16 2003, @05:27PM (#7489498)
    What annoys me are all these mail-in rebate promotions these companies use. When you factor in all the added wasted time and the fact that the company holds onto your money so long and it's like pulling teeth getting it back, it's not worth it.

    Rebates are taxes on laziness, or more appropriately a false-advertising campaign designed to target people who aren't inclined to jump through the hoops necessary to get the rebates. If the company does an "instant rebate" at the time of purchase, that's another matter, but my policy is I do NOT buy any product that promises a certain price "after rebate" - that's BS. What I pay at the POS is the price of the product and I'm not giving the manufacturer additional information or worrying about documentation, mailing crap and keeping track of that malarky. I encourage everyone else to avoid any product promotions involving rebates so we can send a message to these retailers that we're not going to play their stupid false advertising game.
  • by Chief Mucky Muck (724681) on Sunday November 16 2003, @05:45PM (#7489582)
    Wanted to make a couple points perfectly clear. When we rec'd the dmca notification and electronic delivery of a copy of a subpoena, it was late on Friday night. To be on the safe side, we acted to remove the specified information to remove any potential liability. (as legal counsel was not immediately available for guidance) Saturday was spent putting together the legal team, the real work starts tonight and tomorrow. Last year, Wal-Mart backed down before we filed our Motion to Quash - it remains to be seen what Best Buy's attitude will be in the battle of intellectual property counsel. We certainly do not believe that there is a legitimate copyright issue at hand, but as I had stated to Best Buy before information was even posted on our site, the potential for "trade secret" does exist here, but it is their responsibility to protect their intellectual property. Once a trade secret is made public, trade secret protection is no longer available. I am not a lawyer, and I didn't stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night - But this is where the current thought pattern is - stay tuned for more details early this week. Tim Storm President FatWallet, inc.
      • by Chief Mucky Muck (724681) on Sunday November 16 2003, @07:25PM (#7490014)
        Thanks for your comments, however off base they may be.

        The issue at hand is that Best Buy filed a DMCA notice - not a c&d. This means that they are claiming copyrihght on the information.

        A DMCA notification allows the notifier to subpoena the information regardless of the merit of the copyright claim, that is the issue we are dealing with here.

        If this were another type of Intellectual property issue, such as trade secret, Best Buy would have to file a lawsuit against the John Doe, and then subpoena the information based upon the lawsuit.

        However, in this case, it appears as though the information was available elsewhere before it was posted on FatWallet, which it could be argued that the information was already "in the public", so the trade secret claims would be tough to prove.

        Any intellectual property claim would be against the person making the post on our site, as we would have immunity thanks to the commudications decency act.

        Thanks again for your comments

        Tim Storm FatWallet, inc.
    • by Champaign (307086) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:10PM (#7488395) Homepage Journal
      That's usually how I deal with businesses that I feel have behaved irresponsibly or treated me badly as a customer, I stop shopping there.

      The unfortunate side-effect of this is I have to move every few years as I run out of places to buy food, clothes and other necessities of life...

      *BUT* at least I live a principled life! ;-)

        • If you think you can avoid them [companies that hurt you] totally, good luck living off your home farm, and walking everywhere.. its not practical.

          A common argument tactic is to push the debate into a false dichotomy--all or nothing--is a commonly used one. We see this with the MPAA/RIAA in copyright extension and copy prevention techniques (which attempt to keep you from making even non-infringing copies). In this instance, since you can't avoid doing business with all the companies that hurt you, you are somehow ethically justified in avoiding none of them. With this logic it's okay to throw up your hands in disgruntlement then pay to see the next Star Wars movie, buy proprietary software, or the next flashy tech trinket you want.

          Don't fall for this trap. Nobody is asking you to avoid all companies that harm you. You can choose to avoid some of them and still lead a perfectly productive and entertained life. Start with the easy ones like major movie and record publishers. You might even save a few bucks in the process (which you might choose to spend on organizations and artists that aren't trying to restrict your freedom to share). With other goods and services, you can find alternatives. You can tell businesses that don't hurt you why you're willing to buy stuff from them instead of their competitor. Don't let the best be the enemy of the good.

    • Re:Interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by crayz (1056) on Sunday November 16 2003, @02:21PM (#7488468) Homepage
      And if our government's sole function was to ensure the highest possible profits for Best Buy, you'd have a point.

      Instead, as a poster pointed out earlier in this topic, our economy is more or less based on free market principles. The foundation of the free market is the ability of the members of that market to be able to make informed decisions about their economic choices(e.g. buying something). By saying that Best Buy has the right to prevent people from sharing information about its prices, you are implicitly tossing out a free market in favor of a "lets make the rich richer" market.

      Wonderful
    • by Todd Knarr (15451) on Sunday November 16 2003, @08:27PM (#7490284) Homepage

      Hmm, let's see. This is supposed to be private information at the moment. Should a person (or a company) have the right to keep sensitive information private if it poses no harm to anyone? I'm inclined to answer yes.

      I'm inclined to answer yes to that question too, but that isn't the question in this case. The question is, once BestBuy has failed to keep the information private, do they have a right to force someone else to take on the duty of non-disclosure even though they haven't signed a non-disclosure agreement? That, I'm inclined to answer a big loud "No!" to. If BestBuy wants to keep their prices private, the onus is on them to keep them private, not the rest of us.