Guy Claims Pinterest Is A Ripoff Of His Failed, Unrelated Site

from the but-more-stupid dept

By now, everyone should be familiar with the crazy story of the Winklevoss twins, who claimed Mark Zuckerberg "stole" their idea to create Facebook. Over time, other companies have seen similar claims of "copying," usually after someone who was a total flop in the market gets jealous of someone who built a real company. The latest example is Pinterest, which has now been accused of "stealing" the idea through a path so convoluted it may take a map to work out the details.

Here's the short version, as far as I can tell, and unless there are more details, it seems likely that this is going to get laughed out of court (hopefully with sanctions for filing an obviously bogus lawsuit). Basically, a guy (Theodore Schroeder) started a site you never heard of (called RendezVoo) in which people could "share their locations" (sounds like they should be suing FourSquare, not Pinterest). That site wasn't getting much traction, but they planned a version two, where people could "share opinions, views, items and tastes on a variety of subjects" like, well, pretty much any other site on the internet. This site included "boards" that people could post stuff too and also had "infinite scrolling" when an alpha was released in August of 2006.

Months later, Schroeder met Ben Cohen, an investor in startups in NYC, who apparently told them he didn't understand what they were trying to do with RendezVoo, but brainstormed up a totally unrelated and different concept, whereby startups could "launch" new products via a sort of wire service. Schroeder and his other partners (who continued to work day jobs) completely dumped their RendezVoo plans and worked out something new, called Skoopwire (originally Scoopwire, until they realized someone else had the domain). With this plan in hand, they signed up Cohen to be a partner, taking on the role of Chairman (and promising to put in a little bit of money). Over the course of a few months, not much appeared to happen, and after Cohen (quite reasonably) pointed out that it was silly for the other partners in the project to still be working day jobs rather than focusing on the project, it went dormant.

Months later, Cohen apparently met the founders of Pinterest and became their first investor. At the time, they were still figuring out what their product would be. This is where Schroeder and his lawyers take a massive logic leap in claiming that Cohen "stole" all of Schroeder's ideas and gave them to Pinterest's founders. This is based on... almost nothing of substance. The claims are basically that Pinterest has "infinite scrolling," that it has "boards" and that they used a "pink and purple color scheme to attract female users." Of course, none of that is even remotely "protectable." Those are basic ideas that are found all over the place.

Hell, a quick Google search shows that "infinite scroll" first showed up well over a year earlier, and at nearly the same exact time as Schroeder launched the new version of RendezVoo with infinite scroll, Microsoft's Live.com image search had the feature. In other words, "infinite scroll" -- especially for images -- was already popping up in a variety of places. It's ridiculous to think that Cohen -- who, again, insisted he didn't understand RendezVoo and told the team to build an entirely different product -- "stole" the idea and sat on it for a year and a half to give to some other entrepreneurs who somehow failed to see a ton of other sites using infinite scroll by that point. Similarly the idea of organizing a web page as a "board" was hardly new at this time, and let's not even bother discussing the idea of making a site "pink and purple."

Also, like pretty much every similar claim we've seen in the past, it involves someone completely overvaluing the idea and ignoring that it's the execution, not the idea, that matters in innovation. Pinterest isn't a success because of "boards" or "infinite scrolling" or "purple and pink" but because it built a great service that people like -- something Schroeder didn't do. Also, note that tons of Pinterest clones have popped up in the wake of Pinterest's success, but you don't see Pinterest suing, rather continuing to build out their product.

The whole thing seems like sour grapes from a failed entrepreneur because someone else succeeded with a totally different idea, and he saw a weak connection to use as the basis of a lawsuit.

Randomly, the AllThingsD article above notes one other oddity: Schroeder's lawyers insist that he's a "self-taught computer genius," but there aren't any records of him online. ATD's Liz Gannes couldn't find any trace of him on the web, which seems odd for someone who claims to be an internet entrepreneur and knowledgeable about what's new in social networking.
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Filed Under: ben cohen, copying, execution, ideas, theodore schroeder
Companies: pinterest, renedezvoo, skoopwire


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  • icon
    Zakida Paul (profile), 3 Jan 2013 @ 12:35pm

    Techdirt is a rip off of a website I had 5 years ago selling cheese.

    I'm coming for you!!!!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 3 Jan 2013 @ 12:43pm

    In short, I'm broke, Pinterest stole my investor, give me some money.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Fushta (profile), 3 Jan 2013 @ 12:44pm

    Lawsuit against FourSquare in...

    3...2...1

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    FauxReal (profile), 3 Jan 2013 @ 12:48pm

    Schroeder IS a computer and social networking genius and this is why.

    The lack of Schroeder's Internet records/footprints is a testament to his computer genius. In today's age of ubiquitous tracking by both governments and corporation and the explosion of user generated content and social networking, this man is the ultimate techno-stealth-ninja-master. I for one praise Mr. Schroeder's ability to seem completely irrelevant even when filing a lawsuit.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 3 Jan 2013 @ 12:51pm

    I had an idea for a search site years ago (when using Webcrawler...)

    I thought wouldn't it be nice to be able to search for things and see pictures...

    I even had a catchy name to capture the visual aspect... "O'ogle"

    I'm sure I'm due at least 50% of Google's profits, since it was obviously my idea that they stole years ago.... If only I had been wearing my tinfoil hat when their corporate goons interviewed me....

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Greg (profile), 3 Jan 2013 @ 1:18pm

      Re: I had an idea for a search site years ago (when using Webcrawler...)

      No, Google was my idea! I came to me while I was drinking with a friend in university in 1990. I think I said "Wouldn't it be great to, like, be able to search for, like, information... and FIND it?" Although I passed out moments later after finishing my shot and some of the words were a bit slurred, the meaning was clear. From that moment on I owned all search related concepts so Google and every other search engine that ever existed owe me all their profits forever. Lawsuit coming.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Steve, 3 Jan 2013 @ 1:12pm

    Amazing what some people will do to make a quick buck (or get some attention).

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 3 Jan 2013 @ 3:26pm

    i dunno. if the big guys steal from each other (apple, google, microsoft, etc), why wouldn't the little guys too? not saying it's true, but i wouldn't dismiss it. even if he can't prove it, does it mean it didn't happen? no. it just means he won't be getting any money for it.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Gopal Iyer, 3 Jan 2013 @ 5:43pm

    May be Schroeder is telling the truth

    May be Schroeder is telling the truth. In this day and age, people steal things so much and don't give any credit for others.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    orbitalinsertion (profile), 3 Jan 2013 @ 6:09pm

    Infinite scroll? Are you kidding? This is what we always had before people got oh-so-into pagination.

    Here's your damn infinite scroll, with a hint of pagination:
    http://www.timecube.com/
    Feel free also to compare and contrast the magical thinking used by Schroeder and oray.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    sarah, 17 Mar 2013 @ 4:06pm

    claim

    please you can fax me 64 06 3533883 l need infromtion claim refund from untied benfits and award notioion commoisson

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    sarah, 17 Mar 2013 @ 4:06pm

    claim

    please you can fax me 64 06 3533883 l need infromtion claim refund from untied benfits and award notioion commoisson

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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