ScreenClip(36)The Wall Street Journal reports that M-Edge, a manufacturer of protective cases for Amazon’s Kindle (who we’ve already mentioned a number of times on TeleRead), has filed suit against Amazon for unfair competition, patent infringement, and a raft of other offenses.

M-Edge’s complaint claims that, two months after signing a 3-year contract for 15% royalties on the cases, Amazon turned around and tried to pressure M-Edge into signing a contract for 32% royalties instead, and threatened it with delisting from the site when it refused. Since Amazon represents 90% of the company’s revenue, it was unable to hold out and finally signed the new contract, costing it $6.5 million it would not otherwise have had to pay.

M-Edge also alleges that Amazon created a light-equipped Kindle case of its own in violation of one of M-Edge’s patents, and played with its rankings and inventory reports in the on-line store to make it harder for customers to find.

It’s certainly no secret that Amazon plays hardball with its suppliers—witness the kerfuffle last year when five of the big six publishers imposed agency pricing on it. It would be good to see that kind of behavior get firmly smacked down. Still, I have to wonder whether there will be any satisfactory income for M-Edge. Nothing says Amazon has to carry its products at all after the terms of the current contract expire. If Amazon represents 90% of the company’s revenue, its days might still be numbered even if it wins.

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TeleRead Editor Chris Meadows has been writing for us--except for a brief interruption--since 2006. Son of two librarians, he has worked on a third-party help line for Best Buy and holds degrees in computer science and communications. He clearly personifies TeleRead's motto: "For geeks who love books--and book-lovers who love gadgets." Chris lives in Indianapolis and is active in the gamer community.

2 COMMENTS

  1. > Nothing says Amazon has to carry its products at all

    Hence the patents! They must be hoping Amazon will be forced to license their patents, and those licensing negotiations will make for a more balanced relationship.

    If Amazon are still selling e-ink readers in 3 years, they won’t want to stop selling lit cases.

  2. M-Edge are making a lot of claims. What I would wonder is why they did not exert their right at the time, if this story is true. They had a contract they say, and they had a patent, they say.
    However that is not to say they don’t have rights now and may be fully in the right.
    It wouldn’t be the first time a big bully squashed a peon just because it could. M-Edge had better have deep pockets and a lot of patience.

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