DALLAS, Ga. (AP) – When Alan and Linda Townsend were unhappy with the sprayed-on siding applied to their house, the frustrated couple launched a Web site to complain and to give other unsatisfied customers a forum.

Visitor postings to the Web site said the product, Spray on Siding, cracked, bubbled and buckled. For their efforts, the Townsends got slapped with a lawsuit by the product’s maker.

The federal case may help shape the boundaries of online speech.

Companies routinely go after individuals when they feel people are maligning them on the Internet. And often, legal scholars say, the Web site’s owners don’t fight back at all.

In this dispute, North Carolina-based Alvis Coatings Inc., which supplied the siding product used in the Townsends’ $16,721 project, claims the couple’s Web site infringes on the company’s trademarks, defames its product and intentionally misleads and confuses consumers.

Alvis is seeking more than $75,000 in damages in addition to unspecified punitive damages and attorney fees.

“We could lose everything, including the house, and still be in debt,” said Alan Townsend, whose house is valued at around $150,000.

Though neither side was looking for a brawl over speech rights, the lawsuit is headed that way, said Paul Levy, an attorney for Public Citizen, which agreed to help represent the Townsends.

The complaint filed by Alvis alleges that the name of the Townsends’ Web site, spraysiding.com, “is confusingly similar” to the official Alvis site, sprayonsiding.com, as well as its trademark “Spray on Siding.”

Levy argues that the Town­sends have the right to use the domain name they purchased.

Judges also weigh whether a person is likely to confuse the gripe site with the real one, said Wendy Seltzer, staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based civil-liberties group. A site that bashes a product is not likely to create such confusion, she said.

Companies have threatened scores of criticism sites with trademark infringement and have lost many of the cases that have actually gone to court, Seltzer said. But most of the time, she said, the site owners simply agree to stop before a lawsuit is even filed. Thus, the boundaries of their rights are never tested.

Having this case and others like it go to court should help better define permissible conduct – and perhaps discourage companies from such threats in the future, if they know they would likely lose, Seltzer said.

The Townsends’ Web site has a message board in which other customers comment. Alvis’ lawsuit, filed in September in U.S. District Court in Charlotte, N.C., contends the Townsends are responsible for posting the “false, misleading and disparaging” comments on that message board.

A federal law offers some protections to Internet providers for content their visitors post or transmit, and courts have separately held that criticism when framed as opinion is not libelous, legal scholars say.

But like the trademark challenges, many Web site owners don’t bother fighting in such cases, said Deirdre K. Mulligan, director of the law and technology clinic at the University of California at Berkeley.

Craig Hartman, Alvis’s chief operations manager, said his company sued the Townsends only after months of fruitless dealings with the couple.

Hartman said the company made three “formal generous offers” to the Townsends that were rejected. He said the lawsuit was a last resort.

The Townsends say one settlement offer from Alvis included a gag order barring them talking about the product and a demand that the couple sell their site’s domain name to the company. They decided they would rather fight so that other potential customers could be better informed about the product.

“As long as this stuff is on our house, we’re going to talk about it,” Linda Townsend said. “You could say we’re very idealistic about this.”

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