Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-10-03 17:29:57| Engadget

The WP Engine web hosting service is suing WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg and his company Automattic. This follows a public feud over the WordPress trademark. The federal lawsuit accuses Mullenweg of abuse of power, extortion and greed. This is the latest volley in an ongoing battle between WordPress and WP Engine, but it requires a bit of background. WordPress is the backend that powers a large chunk of the internet, around 40 percent of websites. Users can build a website from the ground up using WordPress or opt for an easier plug-and-play solution offered by third-party providers like WP Engine. Mullenweg, who runs his own provider called Automattic, began loudly criticizing WP Engine back in September, calling it a cancer to WordPress. He said that the third-party providers name has confused customers into thinking it's actually part of WordPress. He also accused WP Engine of turning off certain features to save money. I tried to summarize the @wpengine and WordPress issue: https://t.co/xlGuV3EWQm Matt Mullenweg (@photomatt) September 26, 2024 WP Engine responded with a cease-and-desist letter and a request to withdraw the aforementioned comments, according to reporting by TechCrunch. It also said that its use of the WordPress trademark was legal under fair use. It went on to claim that Mullenweg threatened to take a scorched earth nuclear approach against WP Engine unless it agreed to pay a significant percentage of its revenues for a license to the WordPress trademark. After this, the WordPress Foundation changed its Trademark Policy page and accused WP Engine of never once donating to the open-source arm of the foundation, despite making billions of revenue on top of WordPress. He went as far as to suggest that WP Engine covered up trademark abuse by editing websites.  Some of the frantic changes @wpengine has been making to their site to hide their trademark abuse include editing customer quotes, without permission! I have confirmed with @pcrumm he did not approve this change. Journalists should ask WPE and others about this. pic.twitter.com/NQOZ0TPDDT Matt Mullenweg (@photomatt) October 3, 2024 Mullenweg also banned WP Engine from accessing certain resources, like some plug-ins and themes. WP Engine powers over 200,000 websites and this move allegedly broke a lot of them. In response, the company wrote that Mullenwegs unprecedented and unwarranted action interferes with the normal operation of the entire WordPress ecosystem, impacting not just WP Engine and our customers. Matt Mullenweg and Automattics self-proclaimed scorched earth campaign against WP Engine has harmed not just our company, but the entire WordPress ecosystem. The symbiotic relationship between WordPress, its community and the businesses that invest millions to support WordPress WP Engine (@wpengine) October 3, 2024 On October 1, WP Engine announced that it had developed its own solution that allowed consumers to access all of the missing themes and plug-ins. It followed that with todays lawsuit, which accuses Mullenweg of demanding eight percent of the companys monthly revenue as a royalty payment. The suit also alleges that Mullenweg and Automattic participated in libel, slander, violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and IRS fraud. Matt Mullenwegs conduct over the last ten days has exposed significant conflicts of interest and governance issues that, if left unchecked, threaten to destroy that trust, WP Engine said in a statement. WP Engine has no choice but to pursue these claims to protect its people, agency partners, customers and the broader WordPress community. Mullenweg and Automattic have yet to respond to todays developments.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/wordpress-founder-sued-for-alleged-libel-and-attempted-extortion-152957987.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

20.12Tesla is recalling almost 700,000 vehicles over a tire pressure monitor issue
20.12James Bond (the movie franchise, not the spy) may be in deep jeopardy
20.12Google's Gemini Deep Research tool is now available globally
20.12How to schedule messages on Instagram
20.12Audi Vietnam reads brainwaves to help consumers decide whether the Q8 is the car for them
20.12Intel Arc B580 review: The new king of $250 GPUs (for now)
20.12Hisense's HT Saturn speakers feature wireless Dolby Atmos and room calibration
20.12Ubisoft quietly squeezes out another NFT game featuring Rayman, Blood Dragon
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

21.12Top 10 PSU performers in CY24. Here's how much they have returned
21.12Terry Savage: Giving the gift of a college savings plan
21.12Learn with ETMarkets: Understanding base metals and how to trade it
21.12Google suggests fixes to its search monopoly
21.12LNG producer Venture Global files for IPO on NYSE
21.1222 smallcap stocks stood out with double-digit gains in a forgetful week for Indian investors
21.12FPI Focus: Financials, IT, and real estate dominate December inflows
21.12Siemens sounds alarm: Capital goods stocks plunge amid capex concerns
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .