August 31, 2004 4:51 PM PDT

Pop-up purveyor Claria settles suits

Adware company Claria has quietly settled litigation brought by Wells Fargo, Quicken Loans and other online businesses, which charged that its delivery of pop-up ads violated their trademarks, CNET News.com has learned.

Claria, formerly known as Gator, ended a multidistrict litigation case, or combined lawsuit, with Wells Fargo and Quicken Loans on Aug. 7, according to the plaintiffs' attorney. In recent months, it also has quietly settled with UPS, Hertz, L.L. Bean, Tiger Direct and Six Continents, a Claria representative confirmed.

Terms of the settlements were not disclosed.

"These (cases) have been settled to the satisfaction of all parties," said Claria spokesman Scott Eagle, adding that with some plaintiffs, a business relationship was formed. "Claria will continue to protect (its) business model."

Claria, which recently suspended plans to go public, still faces a lawsuit from retail florist Teleflora, which filed its case in April 2004. Claria has appealed the court to have the case considered individually as opposed to part of the consolidated case.

Though the settlements close another chapter in a long-running dispute over the practices of adware companies such as Claria, they also leave questions unresolved about the legality of their services.

Claria's advertising software piggybacks on free downloads such as peer-to-peer application Kazaa, supporting them by delivering targeted ads to users. Once downloaded, Claria's application serves pop-up and pop-under ads to people while they're surfing the Web or when they visit specific sites. Ads can be keyed to sites so that a pitch for low mortgage rates, for example, can appear when a surfer visits a rival financial company's site.

Wells Fargo, which filed its lawsuit in the spring of 2003, along with other plaintiffs, has charged that Claria violates copyrights and trademarks by allowing rivals' ads to appear atop or under their sites. Claria fielded as many as 13 related cases, so in early 2002, the company filed to have the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation consolidate the cases.

The panel, a court based in Washington, D.C., was originally set up to handle special disaster-related cases. But it has since been used to handle intellectual property cases such as the ones surrounding Napster.

Adware critics have yet to receive a final decision on the legality of adware. In February 2003, Claria settled a high-profile case brought by The Washington Post, The New York Times, Dow Jones and other media companies. Terms of that deal were quiet too, but Claria has since stopped delivering pop-ups to those publishers' sites.

Pending lawsuits could still clear up the issue. Claria rival WhenU.com has a case pending in Detroit, Mich., filed by Wells Fargo and Quicken Loans on the same matter. Terence Ross, partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, expects it to go to trial in 2005. WhenU has filed an appeal in a New York district court in a case brought by 1-800-Contacts.com, which had won an injunction against the company's pop-up ads.

Google, which allows advertisers to bid for trademarked names to appear in related search results, could also figure largely in the debate. It's currently involved in two cases in the United States with advertisers that complain its practices violate their trademarks. The No. 1 search provider is fielding lawsuits from American Blind and Wallpaper as well as Geico.

Attorneys liken the recent settlements to a legal thriller that's to be continued.

"It avoids any definitive resolution about the legality of adware, and that may be to the benefit of adware providers such as Gator in that there will be an uncertainty in the marketplace," said Ross, who represented Wells Fargo and Quicken Loans in the case.

See more CNET content tagged:
Claria Corp., Wells Fargo & Co., Quicken, legality, adware

Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • Nanotech: The Circuits Blog

    SanDisk stock surges on buyout rumors

    Stock for flash memory maker SanDisk is up on rumors that a buyout by Samsung is in the works.

  • Gallery

    Images: The art of 'Spore' prototypes

    Will Wright and his Maxis team worked on dozens of prototypes to test the elements of their soon-to-be-released evolution game. Here's a sampling.

  • The Open Road

    Analysts as a lagging indicator of success

    Gartner, Forrester, and other analyst firms tend to be great predictors of the past, probably because that's where they get their money.

  • Outside the Lines

    EIC Squared: Chrome, iPods, and a Dell-Salesforce union

    On this week's EIC Squared podcast CNET's Dan Farber and ZDNet's Larry Dignan discuss Google's latest rocket launch--the Chrome browser--as well as Apple's iPod event next week and a Dell-Salesforce.com union.

  • Video

    Katie Couric reflects on first Webcast

    The political conventions are over and so are CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric's first series of Webcasts. CNET's Kara Tsuboi sat down with Couric on the final night of the Republican National Convention to discuss what she liked about Webcasting, some of her most memorable guests, and whether TV news will still be around by the next round of conventions.

  • News - Wireless

    Start-up launches spectrum marketplace

    A new company called Spectrum Bridge has launched a Web site for buying and selling wireless spectrum licenses.

  • Video

    YouTube plays party politics

    During the presidential campaigning four years ago, YouTube didn't even exist. Now it's a tool candidates must master to get their message across. CNET's Kara Tsuboi stops by the YouTube upload booths at the Democratic and Republican conventions to find out why Google's video site has such a big presence in Denver and St. Paul, Minn.

  • News - Gaming and Culture

    Are Demo and TechCrunch50 fragmenting their audiences?

    With both events scheduled to start Monday, many press, as well as venture capitalists and others are having to choose which one to attend.

  • News - Cutting Edge

    Execs predict next Google-like tech

    On eve of company's 10-year anniversary, researchers and business pundits speculate about what technologies might someday have as much impact as Google.

  • Gallery

    Photos: Future Combat Systems, here and now

    The U.S. Army has ambitious plans for a widespread high-tech refresh of its vehicles and other soldier gear. It's also finding a way to make some parts happen sooner rather than later.

  • Crave

    Leaked specifications of the LG Prada II

    Leaked specifications of the LG Prada II.

  • Green Tech

    Duke Energy to invest in mini solar power plants

    Can hundreds of rooftop solar panels collectively operate like a central power plant? Duke Energy launches $100 million distributed solar program to find out.