PDA

View Full Version : Fantasy leagues don't need MLB licenses: judge's rulings


Mattingly
08-09-2006, 09:05 AM
No License Is Required to Run a Fantasy League (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/09/sports/baseball/09fantasy.html)
Major League Baseball Advanced Media, the Internet arm of Major League Baseball, had a major setback yesterday in its attempt to regulate the growing fantasy baseball industry when a federal judge ruled that companies do not need licenses to operate such leagues.

A St. Louis company that runs fantasy leagues, CBC Distribution and Marketing Inc., had sued Major League Baseball Advanced Media, saying that the players’ names and performance statistics were in the public domain.

Four weeks before the trial was set to begin, United States District Court Judge Mary Ann Medler upheld CBC’s argument in a 49-page summary judgment. She rejected baseball’s claim that the use of the players’ names in commercial fantasy leagues violated their rights of publicity. She also ruled that even if CBC’s repetition of purely factual information had violated those rights, it was was trumped by the United States Constitution.

“The players’ right of publicity,” she wrote, “must give way to CBC’s First Amendment right to freedom of expression.”

According to the Fantasy Sports Trade Association, more than 15 million people spend about $1.5 billion annually to play fantasy sports — games in which fans draft and run their own teams of real-life players. Virtually all of them use an outside service like CBC to keep track of rosters, players’ statistics, trades and more.

KCGHOST
08-09-2006, 09:06 AM
I am sure MLB will appeal and this case will go on for quite a while yet.

PopTop
08-09-2006, 01:54 PM
You're right, KCghost. MLB just hasn't found the right judges to pay off yet.

Eddiey
08-09-2006, 05:43 PM
MLB is doing it again. Trying to stick it to their fans. They tried to in essence
destroy fantasy baseball, lost in the courts, and now say they will appeal.
Their green is unbelievable. I would think that fantasy sports brings in news fans. Why do they wish to destroy what is a marketing tool for them? Obviously its greed. They can't see past the dollar bills immediately in front of their faces and see the bigger picture. Typical baseball management decision. I guess thats why baseballs popularity has slipped beneath that of football and will most likely will be surpassed by others very soon.

SoxSon
08-10-2006, 08:58 AM
Merging with similar thread.

Captain Cold Nose
08-10-2006, 09:23 AM
You're right, KCghost. MLB just hasn't found the right judges to pay off yet.
They only have a couple more shots at it.

Brian McKenna
08-10-2006, 09:25 AM
Are private fantasy companies making serious cash off major league stats?

Captain Cold Nose
08-10-2006, 09:29 AM
Are private fantasy companies making serious cash off major league stats?
Considering the payoffs some of those companies offer, probably.

Big Whiskey
08-11-2006, 07:55 PM
The whole thing was silly in the first place. Results of games and their statistics, and associating them with the appropriate players and teams are news. News is not intellectual property, and is fair game to be repackaged and sold by anyone in any way, including fantasy leagues. Does the AP, ESPN or Sports Ill pay MLB every time it publishes standings and stats? Of course not, just like Dow Jones doesn't pay the NYSE to publish stock prices.

Using team logos in a for-profit enterprise without a license (unless that logo has reverted to the public domain) is another story altogether, and I expect MLB to prevail in that regard.