Facebook facing shutdown over 'stolen code' claim
By Rene Millman
Posted on 17 Jul 2007 at 14:37
Facebook, the popular social-networking website will face shutdown if it fails to win a US court battle next week.
A hearing to be held in a US court next Wednesday (July 25) marks the latest battle in a three-year spat between Facebook and rival website ConnectU.
Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss and Divya Narendra, former fellow Harvard students of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, allege that Zuckerberg copied code and a business plan from their site while he was still working for them as a programmer. At the time, the site was known as harvardconnect.com. It later changed its name to ConnectU.
The dispute started when Zuckerberg launched his website in February 2004, a month after promising to finish the plaintiff's website.
The plaintiffs have demanded that Facebook be shut down and full control of the site and all assets be passed to them.
Facebook is suing ConnectU for alleged business torts and unfair business practices.
Since branching out its network from just students to everyone last September, Facebook has grown from 14 million to 26 million visitors per month, according to comScore figures. Facebook is also rumoured to be seeking a possible IPO.
The filing can be viewed here.
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