Rediff India Abroad
 Rediff India Abroad Home  |  All the sections

Search:



The Web

India Abroad




Newsletters
Sign up today!

Article Tools
Email this article
Top emailed links
Print this article
Contact the editors
Discuss this article
Home > Cricket > India's tour of Pakistan > PTI > Report


'No cricket scores on cell phones'

February 07, 2006 14:23 IST
Last Updated: February 07, 2006 16:22 IST


The Madras high court on Tuesday restrained mobile phone service providers across the country for four weeks from giving any SMS pertaining to the ongoing One-Day International between India and Pakistan.

Giving the interim-order on a civil suit filed by M/S Marksman Marketing Services Pvt Ltd, Justice M Chockalingam said, "The court was of considerable opinion that it is a fit case for an ad-interim injunction. Ex-parte has got to be granted."

The judge held that the "balance of convenience" was in favour of the applicant.

In the civil suit, the applicant contended it had secured the rights of disseminating information relating to scores, alerts and updates or other events or happenings of the tour through SMS.

The applicant had secured the rights from Pakistan-based Vectracom Pvt Ltd, which had entered into an agreement with the Pakistan Cricket Board on December 29, 2005, with respect to exclusive global SMS rights of the Indo-Pakistan series.

The petitioner submitted that during the recently-concluded India-Pakistan Test series, it was noticed that cellular phone operators were disseminating information related to scores and updates through SMS to their subscribers allegedly without obtaining permission from Vectracom.

The applicant apprehended that cellular phone companies across the country would also provide information relating to scores and updates of the ODI series too, without obtaining permission.

The respondents were "exploiting the rights of the petitioner in a commercial way and earning huge profits," the applicant contended and said if the cell operators were allowed to provide such information, "commercially, the petitioner alone was responsible for any loss to Vectracom and the Pakistan Cricket Board".

The petitioner said by transmitting scores "instantaneously and contemporaneously", the defendants were indulging in "almost large scale pirated transmission of live instant information".

The defendants mentioned in the suit were -- Bharati Televentures Ltd, BSNL, Reliance Infocom Ltd, Hutchison Essar Ltd, IDEA Cellular Registered Office, Aircell Cellular Ltd, Aircell Ltd, Spice Telecom, Tata Indicom, Sify Ltd, Yahoo Webservices Ltd, India Times, IMI Mobile, Phony Tunes.com, Rediff.com India Ltd, Pyro Mobile Pvt ltd, ON Mobile Asia-Pacific Pvt Ltd, CricInfo India, BCCI and TRAI.


India's tour of Pakistan: The Complete Coverage

© Copyright 2006 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.


Share your comments


 What do you think about the story?




Read what others have to say:


Number of User Comments: 4




Sub: Cricket scores copyrighted ?

This totally sucks. This info is available to *anyone* once broadcast through TV. Its on cricinfo.com, rediff.com, and you just have to look all over ...


Posted by Sameer S





Sub: I need my money back !!!

I realy don't want to know what is going on behind the scenes, what i do want to know is whether I would get back ...


Posted by Gautam Bisht





Sub: View

Will there be an exception if the SP provides the info free of charge?


Posted by Kaushik Das





Sub: No SMS scores

This is rediculous. A cricket score can not be private property of anybody. The companies might be having their men sitting right in the spectetors. ...


Posted by Shashank Gaitonde




Disclaimer


Advertisement