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Google, Twitter go to bat for Theflyonthewall

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Tue Jun 22, 2010 1:15am EDT

(Reuters) - Google Inc and Twitter Inc have asked an appeals court to overturn a lower court's decision to bar Theflyonthewall.com from issuing immediate news on analyst research from several Wall Street banks, court documents showed.

Theflyonthewall.com posted headlines from research reports and press releases on its website, often before banks could share their recommendations with their clients.

In March, U.S. District Judge Denise Cote said Theflyonthewall.com engaged in "systematic misappropriation," essentially getting a "free ride" from its quick publication of upgrades and downgrades that can move stocks higher and lower.

The ruling was made in favor of Bank of America Corp's Merrill Lynch unit, Barclays Plc and Morgan Stanley, which had earlier sought court intervention to ban Theflyonthewall from using their research reports.

However, in a filing with an appeals court late on Monday, Google and Twitter argued that in the age of Internet and instantaneous communication, banning of Theflyonthewall.com's immediate news dissemination was "obsolete."

"News reporting always has been a complex ecosystem, where what is 'news' is often driven by certain influential news organizations, with others republishing or broadcasting those facts -- all to the benefit of the public," the companies said in the filing.

Google and Twitter argued that upholding the district court's decision would give those who obtained the news first strong incentives to block others from obtaining the same information.

The companies also said it was tough to implement "any period of exclusivity" for news.

It would be impossible to craft and enforce a rule restricting the dissemination of readily accessible factual information, the companies said. They requested the court to recognize that "hot news" misappropriation could no longer be practically or fairly applied.

"How, for example, would a court pick a time period during which facts about the recent Times Square bombing attempt would be non-reportable by others?" the companies said in the filing.

The case is IN re: Barclays Capital et al v Theflyonthewall.com, Case No. 10-1372, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

(Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Valerie Lee)

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Comments (2)
KrisPed wrote:
Julius Reuter disruptively innovated market information communication in 1851 when transmission of stock prices were wired and replaced carrier pigeons. How Reuter intercepted and brought the assassination of President Lincoln to the European market headlines long before any other agency and came to quote Reuter has become an anecdote.

Factual, fast and accurate news must not be ignored or withheld from the broader markets. Is that not what makes markets efficient?
Exclusivity contradicts market efficiency, but does break down mature revenue and business models for research institutions.

So what Theflyonthewall.com is doing, if relayed accurately!, is principally no different from what Reuter did with the wire in 1851: To innovate market communications and make information instantaneous.

The challenge is on for the research institutions to innovate their communication channels and business models.

Jun 22, 2010 9:17am EDT  --  Report as abuse
5tudentT wrote:
One hundred percent agreement w/ KrisPed. Further, I would add that this levels the playing field a little, which as been tipping steadily in favor of the big players in the market with their models, supercomputers, the ability to buy/sell in a nanosecond, and their not infrequent inside information.

Jun 22, 2010 10:55am EDT  --  Report as abuse
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