Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
Law

Missed Payment for IM Software Could Leave Traders in the Lurch

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Missed Payment for IM Software Could Leave Traders in the Lurch

Reuters Messaging Network is a tool used by many financial traders to help them meet the strict compliance and record-keeping standards under which they work. However, starting Friday, that service could be hobbled due to a complaint by FaceTime, the company that owns the intellectual property behind the network. Apparently, Reuters neglected to pay a $150,000 bill on time.


Beginning on Friday, Reuters can no longer use a critical piece of technology in its widely used Reuters Messaging Network, a court ruled Wednesday.

Instead, the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York entered judgment in favor of FaceTime Communications, owner of the instant messaging (IM) technology, in its contract dispute with Thomson Reuters.

Reuters had been licensing FaceTime's technology since 2006 to provide instant messaging compliance for its financial customers. That contract expired Jan. 31, and Reuters had the option to pay US$150,000 before then for perpetual rights to the technology. Unfortunately, it didn't make the payment on time.

Could 'Cripple' Operations

Many financial institutions rely on the Reuters technology to ensure compliance with Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Sarbanes-Oxley regulations for logging, archiving and retrieval of electronic communications regarding financial transactions. Traders are typically the technology's primary users, since their communications are subject to strict compliance regulations.

In court documents filed earlier this month, Eran Barak, Reuters' global head of strategy Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales for collaboration services, said that the loss of the technology could "cripple" the day-to-day business operations of Thomson Reuters customers using the Reuters Messaging Network.

"There is no immediate practical substitute" for the compliance technology, and that development of any such substitute "would take several months," Barak said.

'Not Clear What Went Wrong'

Given the apparent importance of the technology in question, it's difficult to discern why the final payment deadline was missed.

"It's not clear what went wrong at Reuters, but this loss should have been avoidable with a proper calendaring system that alerted its in-house lawyers to begin the option evaluation process well in advance of the option window deadline," wrote Eric Goldman, assistant professor at Santa Clara University School of Law, in his blog.

Officials from Reuters could not be reached for comment.

Timetable Concerns

Following the late payment and other difficulties in renegotiating the contract subsequently, FaceTime filed suit against Reuters in May.

"While we are pleased that FaceTime's intellectual property rights are protected, we are concerned about Reuters' timetable for installing replacement technology in light of its representations to the court as to its ability to provide adequate compliance protection for its customers," said Kailash Ambwani, FaceTime's president and CEO.

"Reuters is choosing to potentially put its customers in jeopardy of not having adequate compliance capabilities," Ambwani added on his blog.

'The Power of IP'

"This case amply illustrates the power of intellectual property and the potential for disruption," technology attorney Raymond Van Dyke told the E-Commerce Times.

"Companies endeavor to obtain protection on their R&D (research and development), and must, at times, enforce those protections," Van Dyke explained. "Since one of the protections under copyright is controlling the use of the software, along with other distinct rights on copying, distributing and other actions, an injunction can be obtained against unauthorized usage. The effect, of course, is disruption on companies not able to work around the technology."

Indeed, while FaceTime's Ambwani is pessimistic about Reuters' ability to come up with an alternate technology on a reasonable timetable, Van Dyke said it probably won't come to that.

"It is likely that the parties will reach an accommodation to forestall the disruption," he predicted.

A report in the Wall Street Journal's Business Technology blog, meanwhile, asserts that Reuters already has another vendor's compliance technology in place and ready to be operational by Thursday. So, it's possible any potential disruption will be forestalled altogether.

'Textbook Stuff'

Either way, the case is a good lesson in the importance of carefully managing contracts, Goldman told the E-Commerce Times.

"This is the textbook stuff we try to teach in class," said Goldman, who teaches classes in contract drafting. "You can draft a perfectly great contract, but then mess it up in ways that can't be fixed after the fact."

Many lawyers, "even really sophisticated deal Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse lawyers, sometimes don't think about the implementation end of things," he added. "Solving a client's problem has a cradle-to-grave requirement. If you want to avoid liability, you've got to think about the full aspects of what clients do with their contracts."


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Katherine Noyes


More by Katherine Noyes

Leaked Emails Fuel Climate-Change Firestorm
November 23, 2009
A batch of illegally obtained emails exchanged by climate change researchers supposedly constitutes evidence of a conspiracy among scientists to mislead the public on global warming. An increasingly vocal faction has recently been promoting the view that global warming is a lie, or that it is not as severe as reported, or that human activities are not a major contributor -- or all of the above.
Two-Wheel Linux, and Other Reasons to Be Thankful for FOSS
November 23, 2009
Among the many reasons to be thankful for Linux and all that is FOSS are qualities like portability, flexibility, comprehensiveness, a cooperative nature, receptivity to innovation -- oh, and the fact that open source makes such things possible as an electric motorcycle that can tear up the highway at 130 mph.
FOSS and the Google Question
November 19, 2009
How FOSSy is Google, really? "I find it kinda funny that folks tout that Google uses Linux when the most useful tool they have developed -- the Google FS -- they keep internally and therefore don't have to share the code!" observed Slashdot blogger hairyfeet. "So how exactly is Google different from MSFT and Apple, who have both in the past locked up free code for themselves?"
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network