Aer Lingus and Ryanair are taking steps to contest a recent ruling regarding a passenger cap at Dublin Airport. Concurrently, a U.S. court has ruled against Booking.com in a case concerning unauthorized access to Ryanair's website, determining that the company violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. This ruling is part of Ryanair's ongoing legal efforts to combat screen scraping by third-party booking platforms, which the airline claims undermines its business model.
A US court ruled that Booking(dot)com violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act by accessing part of Ryanair's website without permission. The airline has launched a series of legal actions against third-party booking platforms in recent years https://t.co/5DPt0z5ibd https://t.co/dsRfEKzymO
A US court ruled that Booking(dot)com violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act by accessing part of Ryanair's website without permission, court documents showed, a ruling the airline said would help end unauthorised screen scraping by booking sites https://t.co/yDH78QuI58 https://t.co/LIld2OD1jN
U.S. court rules against https://t.co/PjNRgQ1PBH in Ryanair screen-scraping case https://t.co/YNDJNJXuD0