Facebook has removed the popular application Scrabulous from its servers for
international users, nearly a month after it
banned
users in the US from using it.
Scrabulous was a word game very similar to Scrabble, and Hasbro, which owns
the US rights to Scrabble and Mattel which has the international rights, both
requested
the game be removed after they had made their own Facebook game application.
"It surprises us that Mattel chose to direct Facebook to take down Scrabulous
without waiting for
India's
court to rule on the matter, Jayant Agarwalla, co-creator of Scrabulous,
said in an e-mail.
"Mattel's action speaks volumes about their business practices and respect
for the judiciary. It is even more astonishing that Facebook, which claims to be
a fair and neutral party, took this step.''
Scrabulous has since been reworked into a similar game called
Wordscraper,
which looks to be sufficiently different from Scrabble to avoid court action.
At its peak Scrabulous had more than half a million active users. Wordscraper
currently has about quarter of a million, while Hasbro’s Scrabble application
has more than 370,000 users and Mattel’s non-US Scrabble has just over 70,000.
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