NewRiver accuses Morningstar, investment research specialist, of entering NewRiver’s online database without authorized permission and coping thousands of documents from it for use with its own products.
The case is being brought by Massachusetts-based firm NewRiver, which contests that Morningstar used “screen scraping” technology to copy the data.
NewRiver provides online service that helps brokerages send the most up-to-date investment prospectuses to their clients. Web-based service which can cost up to $500,000 a year for subscribers, checks the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Edgar site for new mutual fund prospectuses and stores them in its database for brokerage houses to access.
The company, which processes around 1,000 documents a night, says that between 1 May and 3 December 2008, Morningstar accessed its database over 130,000 times using internet addresses traced to Chicago and China.
A Morningstar spokeswoman denied that the company had used NewRiver’s technology or data, or that it had accessed its password-protected sites to create its products.
“We think the lawsuit has one purpose: to discourage Morningstar from competing with NewRiver,” says Morningstar spokeswoman.
L.D.