A federal judge today denied AT&T's request for a court order to temporarily stop ads from Verizon Wireless that AT&T had called "misleading" because of how consumers would interpret 3G wireless nationwide maps shown in the ads.
Judge Timothy Batten, in an oral statement, denied AT&T's request for a temporary restraining order during the nearly two-hour hearing in Atlanta at the federal district court for northern Georgia.
AT&T's full lawsuitagainst Verizon is still before the court, however, and a preliminary hearing is set for Dec. 16, according to a deputy courtroom clerk. AT&T is also seeking unspecified monetary damages.
"We're disappointed, but still feel strongly that Verizon's ads are misleading and look forward to presenting our full case," said AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel, who attended the hearing in Atlanta.
A Verizon spokesman said:"We appreciate the judge's decision today, and he made it very clear in the hearing by suggesting AT&T wouldn't win if they move forward with the case. We're glad American consumers will have the benefit of knowing the different size[s] of the Verizon 3G network and the AT&T 3G network."
In a 45-page brief filed Monday, Verizon's attorneys had argued against the restraining order on the grounds that the ads are not false or misleading. Verizon said that stopping the ads now would "cause harm to Verizon far outweighing any harm avoided by AT&T" partly because Verizon has invested millions of dollars in the ads to promote its phones and network services during the holiday buying season.
The AT&T motion for a restraining order "is a blatant effort to ask the court to do what the marketplace will not do: shield AT&T from truthful comparative advertisements that Verizon has a right to air and thatconsumers have a right to see," Verizon said in court documents.
AT&T filed suit Nov. 3, claiming that the 3G maps Verizon was showing in its "There's a map for that" ads implied that all areas of the U.S. shown in white were without any network coverage, although Verizon argued that the white areas were only those outside 3G coverage, the areas of highest bandwidth useful for smartphone users.
AT&T said it commissioned a study that showed consumers of the original ads were under the impression that the white areas were without any coverage, even though they often included coverage under older network standards, just not 3G.
But Verizon argued that "the mere fact that some customers may misunderstand the advertisement does not make it misleading" and included labels on maps of the ads indicating that areas shown in blue were 3G and everything else in white was not 3G.
Subsequent to the Nov. 3 filing of the lawsuit, Verizonaired three more TV ads on a Christmas theme, bringing the total number of TV ads to five, with some related radio and newspaper advertising.
AT&T has objected to all the TV ads and related materials and specifically the maps shown in them. Verizon objected to altering the maps as well as to stopping the ads, arguing that the maps are accurate, showing Verizon has five times the 3G area in square miles when compared to AT&T's 3G area.
"AT&T may not like the message that the ads send, but this court should reject its efforts to silence the messenger," Verizon said in its brief.
News source - pcworld.com
Judge Timothy Batten, in an oral statement, denied AT&T's request for a temporary restraining order during the nearly two-hour hearing in Atlanta at the federal district court for northern Georgia.
AT&T's full lawsuitagainst Verizon is still before the court, however, and a preliminary hearing is set for Dec. 16, according to a deputy courtroom clerk. AT&T is also seeking unspecified monetary damages.
"We're disappointed, but still feel strongly that Verizon's ads are misleading and look forward to presenting our full case," said AT&T spokesman Mark Siegel, who attended the hearing in Atlanta.
A Verizon spokesman said:"We appreciate the judge's decision today, and he made it very clear in the hearing by suggesting AT&T wouldn't win if they move forward with the case. We're glad American consumers will have the benefit of knowing the different size[s] of the Verizon 3G network and the AT&T 3G network."
In a 45-page brief filed Monday, Verizon's attorneys had argued against the restraining order on the grounds that the ads are not false or misleading. Verizon said that stopping the ads now would "cause harm to Verizon far outweighing any harm avoided by AT&T" partly because Verizon has invested millions of dollars in the ads to promote its phones and network services during the holiday buying season.
The AT&T motion for a restraining order "is a blatant effort to ask the court to do what the marketplace will not do: shield AT&T from truthful comparative advertisements that Verizon has a right to air and thatconsumers have a right to see," Verizon said in court documents.
AT&T filed suit Nov. 3, claiming that the 3G maps Verizon was showing in its "There's a map for that" ads implied that all areas of the U.S. shown in white were without any network coverage, although Verizon argued that the white areas were only those outside 3G coverage, the areas of highest bandwidth useful for smartphone users.
AT&T said it commissioned a study that showed consumers of the original ads were under the impression that the white areas were without any coverage, even though they often included coverage under older network standards, just not 3G.
But Verizon argued that "the mere fact that some customers may misunderstand the advertisement does not make it misleading" and included labels on maps of the ads indicating that areas shown in blue were 3G and everything else in white was not 3G.
Subsequent to the Nov. 3 filing of the lawsuit, Verizonaired three more TV ads on a Christmas theme, bringing the total number of TV ads to five, with some related radio and newspaper advertising.
AT&T has objected to all the TV ads and related materials and specifically the maps shown in them. Verizon objected to altering the maps as well as to stopping the ads, arguing that the maps are accurate, showing Verizon has five times the 3G area in square miles when compared to AT&T's 3G area.
"AT&T may not like the message that the ads send, but this court should reject its efforts to silence the messenger," Verizon said in its brief.
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