LendingTree lawyers threaten blogger with defamation

Alex Stenback of Behind the Mortgage recently posted the LendingTree data breach story seen here [and here], and his posting attracted a provocative comment regarding LendingTree’s lending practices. In short, the commenter alleged that LendingTree does not let banks compete, but has its own internal lending division (Home Loan Center) that does all the “competing.”
Who knows where the commenter got his information, but a class-action lawsuit in 2006 alleged just that: banks were not really competing, just LendingTree employees. As far as I can tell, the lawsuit is ongoing.

Apparently, all this bothered LendingTree, which sent its lawyer after Stenback to remove the comment, suggesting that by hosting it, Stenback was defaming LendingTree (not likely):

Thanks Alex. Perhaps I was unclear. Are you unwilling to remove the entire comment? It is rife with defamatory comments about LendingTree officers. We would very much appreciate you doing as other blogs have done with this exact comment by removing it entirely.

Maybe that is a polite request, but it sounds like a threat to me. And heck, it sounds like the comment even has some basis in fact.

[crosspost: Consumerist]

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5 Comments on “LendingTree lawyers threaten blogger with defamation”

1
LeadCritic on April 24th, 2008, 6:56 pm  

I too received a letter from an LT attorney requesting that I take the comment down. Who do they think they are? Do they want even more bad press??

2
LeadCritic on April 24th, 2008, 6:58 pm  

by the way I have not taken the comment down and really don’t plan too

3
LEADCRITIC | Mortgage Leads News and Opinions on April 24th, 2008, 7:15 pm  

[...] to Caveatemptorblog the LendingTree attorney’s are not busy enough with their current and future legal troubles. [...]

4
john on April 25th, 2008, 3:05 pm  

PLease show us your letters. i think you are lying.

5

[...] D letters to try to get bloggers to delete comments left by a commenter in posts discussing the Lending Tree Data Leak. The comments listed Lending Tree’s client URL login and claimed it was easy to hack along [...]

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