To a New Jersey college

William Hill donates part of the copyright lawsuit against FanDuel to creative writing courses

The most telling instance involved a page in which FanDuel neglected to remove William Hill’s name from text it allegedly cut and pasted into its own guide, according to the lawsuit.
2019-06-27
Reading time 1:11 min
The bookmaker will give USD 50,000 to Rutgers University-Newark’s master of fine arts program in creative writing. The lawsuit, settled in January, claimed FanDuel had copied William Hill’s own betting guide.

William Hill settled a lawsuit in January it had brought against rival bookmaker FanDuel that alleged that the latter had copied William Hill’s own betting guide. On Thursday, William Hill will donate USD 50,000 of the total amount received from the lawsuit to New Jersey college Rutgers University-Newark’s master of fine arts program in creative writing.

William Hill filed a copyright infringement suit in October in federal court. It produced its guide last June when it began offering sports betting at Monmouth Park Racetrack, as reported by AP News.

FanDuel circulated a virtually identical guide at the Meadowlands Racetrack a month later, the lawsuit claimed. Court documents outlined instances of entire blocks of text from the William Hill guide appearing verbatim in the FanDuel version, although in a different typeface.

The suit also claimed FanDuel copied diagrams illustrating possible bets and odds. For instance, a chart involving a 1:05 p.m. baseball game between the Chicago Cubs and the Philadelphia Phillies listing both starting pitchers and three different ways to bet on the game appeared identically in both publications.

The most telling instance involved a page in which FanDuel neglected to remove William Hill’s name from text it allegedly cut and pasted into its own guide, according to the lawsuit.

William Hill and FanDuel are among the major players vying for dominance in New Jersey’s rapidly growing sports betting market. New Jersey took its first sports bets last June. Since then, the state’s casinos and racetracks have taken in at least $2.94 billion.

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