Facebook Sues German Social Network
July 22, 2008 | by Christopher Nickson
In California, Facebook has sued a German social networking site, claiming it's copied its look, feel and features.
Facebook isn’t happy with the German social network Studivz. That’s because it believes Studivz, short or Studienverzeichnis – or students’ directory – has violated its intellectual property by copying Facebook’s look, feel and features, according to the BBC. So it’s filed suit against the German upstart in a California court.
Studivz has around 10 million members, most of whom are based in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Facebook has around 125 million members, according to the latest figues – but few of them are in Germany, which is why the case has developed, according to Studivz, which claims it has yet to be served with court papers, and has gone to court in Germany to have Facebook’s claims declared to have no merit.
According to its court complaint, Facebook says:
"As with any counterfeit product, Studivz's uncontrolled quality standards for service, features and privacy negatively impact the genuine article."
In response, Marcus Riecke, CEO of Studivz, said: "There are numerous social networks. Facebook was not the first and certainly isn't the only one."
Post Your Comment...Comments
Comment on this article
Please keep your comments relevant to this article. Email addresses are not displayed, they are only required to verify you are human.
When you submit your comment, an email will be sent to your email address with a confirmation link. Once you have clicked on that confirmation link your comment will be posted.
HTML is not allowed.

Kevin on Jul 22nd, 2008 at 10:03 AM:
...this is absolutely absurd. I hope Facebook gets a slap to the face. Do we not recall that MySpace came before facebook and there were previous social networks before that? Not only this, but the site doesn't even look that close to resembling facebook... and it's located in friggin' Germany for crying out loud! Get over yourselves... you goddamn bully company.