MINNEAPOLIS, June 4, 2009

Yahoo Blitzes NFL With Stats Lawsuit

Complaint Alleges Players Union Has Threatened To Sue Web Site Over Fantasy Football

  • As many as 15 million people participate in fantasy football leagues, generating more than $1 billion a year in revenue, according to court documents filed in that case.

    As many as 15 million people participate in fantasy football leagues, generating more than $1 billion a year in revenue, according to court documents filed in that case.  (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

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(CNET)  Yahoo has filed a lawsuit against the NFL Players Association, contending that it shouldn't be forced to pay royalties for using players' names, statistics, and photos in its online fantasy football game because the information is publicly available.

The complaint (PDF), which was filed Monday in U.S. District Court for Minnesota, alleges that the players group has threatened to sue the Internet giant if it doesn't pay licensing fees for the information. Yahoo had licensing agreements with the players union for previous football seasons, but the last of those deals expired on March 1, according to the complaint.

Yahoo claims it no longer needs the union's permission to use the players' information, citing an April court decision in a similar case between the players group and CBS Interactive (the parent company of CNET). The court in that case found that CBS Interactive didn't have to pay for use of football players' names or statistics because the information was already in the public domain. The players association is currently appealing that decision.

Major League Baseball lost a similar case in 2007 to CBC Distribution and Marketing - a Missouri company that sells fantasy sports products via the Web, e-mail, regular mail, and phone. MLB's Internet media arm, later joined by the pro-baseball players' union, had claimed that CBC was using baseball players' names and statistics without a license, thereby violating the players' rights to publicity under state intellectual property laws.

CBC won at the district court level and again at the appeals court level, which held that the company's "first amendment rights in offering its fantasy baseball products supersede the players' rights of publicity."

The lawsuit asks the court to declare that Yahoo's fantasy game business does not violate any rights of publicity owned or controlled by the players group, and prevent the players group from interfering with or threatening Yahoo's fantasy game business.

As many as 15 million people participate in fantasy football leagues, generating more than $1 billion a year in revenue, according to court documents filed in that case.

Carl Francis, director of communications for the NFL Players Association, declined to comment on the lawsuit.

By Steven Musil
©2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All rights reserved.
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by Ichabod09 June 6, 2009 5:15 PM EDT
Where's ms macho?-You know the new female Yahoo CEO that likes to give the impression she has a pair. Figured any mention of sports and she'd be all over it to reinforce the image.

She does however, need to get a new file photo. From what I've seen of her recent photos she is kinda reminiscent of Jimmy Hoffa-he's dead too.
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by caldwellptr June 4, 2009 3:05 PM EDT
Recently in Britian it was ruled that Pringles are indeed Potato Chips. The maker of Pringles was trying to avoid paying taxes. In the anything goes business enviroment, the players asked and yahoo paid for public information. If the information wasn't public, then royalities would be paid for those who play fantasy stock market, and you would not be allowed to quote the opening and closing points, nor how much company stock trades for.
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