Gizmodo’s Comments on MacPadd UnTrue, Erroneous, Unfounded and in
Contravention of its Own Terms of Service
A long awaited telephone
conversation in early in December 2009 with Nick Denton CEO of Gawker Media
assured us that our response to the November Gizmodo article would get complete
and equal “play-time”. All we
wanted was for the erroneous and false article as written and blogged about, to
be removed because it violated Gawker Media’s own Terms of Service. Instead we
were told that we could provide our response to the Gizmodo article.
First of all we don’t want to
give Tom’s Hardware or its self righteous and self absorbed writer Tuan Nguyen
anymore “air time” than really necessary since ALL of what he has put forward
is false uncredible and smacks of some fanatic that you see on the nightly
news.
Second, Gizmodo did not endorse
our company, they effectively reviewed our product approximately one year ago
with some minor sarcasm targeted at the Mac Community.
Third, the only scams or frauds
that has been committed is by Nguyen who received his product without paying,
lied to the general public about his experience and grossly misrepresented the
facts. Gizmodo is not innocent in all of this either because without any duty
of care or due diligence, they assumed what was written by Nguyen was true
without contacting the other side of the issue and that in and of itself, in
our opinion is a crime.
All of this smacks of Nazi
propaganda; Joseph Goebbels – If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will
eventually come to believe it.
The Gizmodo
Article
To say that “Sometimes we
unintentionally endorse companies” is grossly false in its entirety and
context. The original article of November 2008 is provided below;
The Gadget: MacPadd,
the anodized aluminum mousepad meant to match the finish on newer MacBook and
MacBook Pros. It's about the size of a standard mousepad, if slightly shorter
than usual (but just as wide).
The Price: $25
The Verdict: Holy butterface, it works! We originally thought it would be little
more than a gimmick; a shiny surface that looked great but tracked horribly.
Untrue! As a mousing surface for laser and optical mice such as our favorite,
the Logitech
MX 1100, it works fine—or at least as well as normal mousepads.
It's also as weighty as you'd expect
from something made out of metal, so there's the added bonus of it not flailing
around as someone like Matt Buchanan vigorously plays Team Fortress 2, or like
Jesus Diaz when he intensely photo shops Steve Jobs' face onto models (male and
female). The undercarriage of the MacPadd is a gooey melted-marshmallow texture
that holds the pad in place on your desk for added stability.
There are, as always, a few
downsides. It's a few inches shorter in length than normal mouse pads—only
one-and-a-half mouse lengths instead of about two—so you'll run out of room
quicker. It's also hard (you know, metal) so you're more likely to scrape your
wrist on the side as you're using it. And because it's made of aluminum, it's
COLD. Using this in Chicago or New York during the winter would be a bad idea unless
you had the heat turned up, but it's not too bad that you can't deal with it.
At $25 though, it's not too
expensive, and should last quite a bit longer than normal pads that wear out
over time from friction. And when it boils down to it, you know you want an
aluminum mouse pad, and this is a good mouse pad.
Gizmodo did
not mention anything about the MacPadd company, therefore this comment about
“unintentionally endorsing our Company” is wrong.
Gizmodo relied upon someone else
who has lied about his, capabilities, work experience, customer experience
without reading the website about how we conduct business. The first lesson in
life or as professional “see it for yourself”.
We attempted to contact the
author of the Gizmodo article but he refused to respond to our emails or phone
calls. Is there any sense of fairness in this conduct in particular when you
lie to the entire internet world in your article?
It is more disappointing that
Gizmodo does not follow its own Terms of Service (TOS) whereby the commentary
was false, slanderous and unfounded, in particular, related to privacy issues.
We spoke to online business executives who take extraordinary measures to
protect their own private lives so that they quite frankly are not subject to
the likes of Nguyen and upon describing our experience are appalled at the
harassment and misreporting that we have been exposed to. Relative to business
ethics the new targets for the social travesties in our country and afar has
become the online channels.
The ezine, Comsumerist, jumped
into the “feeding frenzy” at the prompting of Nguyen who within a period of a
week became disturbingly obsessed with his $25.00 mouse pad not arriving by
“star trek transporter, with a tracking number”. In addition, Nguyen decided to
start a blog about his $25.00 mouse pad, then he established a Twitter Account.
Is any of this sounding “psycho creepy” yet?
The
Consumertist reconsidered the information available and removed its article from
its blog site December 10th.
Our website has been clear how we ship our product and the
time factors involved. In addition, Nguyen just could not accept the fact,
despite himself being born in Vietnam, immigrating to Canada and acquiring
Canadian citizenship (now working in the USA without a Green Card) and having
lived in Canada for 30 years could not remember or took the time to realize
that Canada Post does not provide tracking numbers to USA addresses for the
type of mail service (we use Small Packet Air).
Here are some facts and points related to the November 2009
Gizmodo review related to MacPadd;
·
Gizmodo never endorsed MacPadd as company nor
were they ever asked to, nor is this a practice on its blogsite
·
Gizmodo asked to review our product
·
Gizmodo was not “highly complimentary of our
product” in the November 2009 review
·
Gizmodo never made comment on the company
selling it or any research on the owners or company itself.
·
Gizmodo never endorsed MacPadd as a
company
·
Gizmodo has not done research on our company or
product other than lies from Nguyen
·
Gizmodo was not asked to own or disown the
company
·
Gizmodo exposes and comments in PRIVATE emails
and alleged conversation of individuals against its own privacy policies
·
Gizmodo did not validate the conversation with
the individual who allegedly made the comments (they were falsely reported by
Nguyen)
·
Gizmodo commented “one sided” the information
related to the conversation by a self serving individual
·
Gizmodo staff refused to return our phone calls
and emails
·
Gizmodo has refused to remove false content
contrary to their own Terms of Service (Gawker Media)
·
MacPadd has a B+ rating with the Better Business
Bureau
·
Best of Media cannot be found as a valid USA
corporation (their headquarters are in France)
·
The long detailed account by Nguyen is again
filled with lies and misinformation that Gizmodo did not take the time to
determine if any of it was true or false.
·
The Tom’s Hardware article was entirely false
From our Canadian perspective, we now see how the USA became
involved in a war in the Middle East in 2002. It was based on false information
to the world by its generals, President and vice President wasting billions in
resources, money and young lives. The media did not check their sources of
information until log after the war had started and they pushed their agenda
forward at the expense of soldiers and the country. The pattern seems to
continue with Gizmodo.
This is the real and honest account and our position related
to Nguyen.
Preamble and Questions
With respect to this incident,
from an alleged hardware review company, it begs the questions;
·
Why was Tom’s Hardware reviewing a mouse pad?
They have never reviewed this type of technology (?!?!?!) before!
·
Does Tom’s hardware have any qualified engineers
on staff that could provide a credible technology review? Does Tom’s hardware
have any business graduates on staff that could comment on business conduct?
And what about ethics?
·
Was this incident a valid hardware review or
just someone taking out their consumer anxiety on some small little company?
·
When you buy a product do consumers look at the
criteria on the website or do you establish your own standards for delivery or
performance regardless of what is posted?
·
Is a mouse pad considered hardware? Is this a
continuation of the Mac Community hatred by Tom’s Hardware or its writers?
THE FACTS AND NOTHING BUT FACTS
Nguyen ordered two MacPadds Friday October 23rd 5:41 pm GMT (Friday evening after our office closing).
MacPadd did not address the order
until Monday October 26th (the first business day after the weekend)
Nguyen received confirmation of
his order from PayPal immediately upon placing his order.
MacPadd’s policy is to have
product shipped within 7 business days (see website) or in this instance to be
shipped by November 3, 2009.
There were emails from Nguyen but
there was nothing to report. Our experience with more advanced online order
systems is that they have automatic responders identifying that the order is in
progress. We do not engage in such services.
The product was packaged and
labelled for shipping late October 29th and delivered to the post
office Friday October 30th.
Nguyen issued a PayPal dispute Friday, October 30th at 3:41
pm GMT 5 business days after the order was received and 3 hours before his 13
calls to MacPadd owner’s residence. MacPadd owner does not make his personal
address available however, it was obtained by Nguyen and posted on Tom’s
Hardware site. A breach of privacy and its own Terms of Service.
MacPadd responded to the PayPal
dispute to Nguyen at approximately 3:55 pm GMT identifying the shipment had
been sent and would provide a tracking number (not remembering the order was
from California however a Customs Declaration Form was available)
Friday evening, there were 11 telephones calls to the MacPadd
owners residence (no one was home) (call display shows who calls and how many
times). When the MacPadd owner arrived the call display showed the many phone
calls but no voice mail. We received the 12th phone call at 7:09 pm
that was threatening, abusive, intrusive and rude. Nguyen demanded a tracking
number for the shipment.
Nguyen emailed my personal email
address several times starting at
7:16 pm Friday evening;
David -
You have 10 minutes after this email is sent to reply with a valid
tracking number for the 2 MacPadds.
Or else we will be forced to write an article about you and the company.
Regards /
Tuan
Nguyen
Director of News
Operations
In order to APPEASE Nguyen’s time
sensitive demand, MacPadd owner attempted to provide the tracking number from
its paper files that evening. See email listing screen shot below.

MacPadd erroneously provided a
tracking number that had a date of 2009/03/10 (March 10th) instead
of the one that was 2009/10/30 (October 30th) not realizing Nguyen
was from the USA.
Regardless and as a matter of
fact, his order was manually prepared and no enhanced Canada Post tracking
number was available however, the Canada/USA Customs Declaration forms were
completed and provided as evidence in this document.
The 13th abusive and
demanding telephone conversation Friday evening at 7:35 pm by Nguyen to the
residence of MacPadd resulted in MacPadd stating that it no longer wants his
business and is issuing a refund. Nguyen did not want a refund and refused
several times however, MacPadd made the decision in order to avoid further
conversations and confrontations.
MacPadd terminated the business relationship with Nguyen at 7:40 pm October
30th, Friday night, based on the 13 phone calls and
demeanour of the telephone conversation and the emails.
From MacPadd’s perspective
there was no obligation or interest to continue any dialogue, provide any
information in light of the refund. As a resolution to the PayPal dispute
as filed by Nguyen Friday afternoon 3:41 pm, MacPadd authorized a refund as a
resolution early Sunday morning November 1st at 5:01 am GMT. Based
on the PayPal policies Nguyen’s payment was held in abeyance outside of the
control of MacPadd effective 3:41pm October 30th. There was no
opportunity for fraud or “ripping him off”.
See refund email confirmation
screen shot. PayPal did not settle the dispute, QMS/MacPadd AUTHORIZED a refund to Nguyen.
There were no innuendos relating to fraudulent activities by PayPal.

Throughout the weekend there were
several threatening emails (see small sampling above) from Nguyen despite the
issuance of a refund.
For the record;
·
MacPadd has been a product offering for 1 year
with one BBB complaint (lost shipment by postal system) (except or Nguyen whose
complaint was invalidated)
·
MacPadd or QMS Inc has a B+ rating from the BBB
·
MacPadd has never been contact by Police or FBI
for possible fraud activities as Nguyen would have you believe
·
The “rip-off” website information was brought to
our attention for the first time
and each issue as identified therein were addressed directly.
·
MacPadd does not make false claims
·
MacPadd has never committed fraud and never will
·
Apple is aware of MacPadd and have considered
selling the product on their website
·
MacPadd met with and talked with several Apple
representatives regarding the sale of our product. No concerns were expressed
at the time of discussion.
·
MacPadd is patent pending
·
MacPadd has sold to over 8,000 customers
All of what has been attempted by Nguyen to discredit our practices
and us has been refuted with evidence. What remains is the deranged
self-righteous individual who himself and Tom’s Hardware has a great deal to
hide.
http://www.techimo.com/forum/imo-community/73275-tom-pabst-thg-afraid-come-us.html
http://hubpages.com/hub/How-Toms-Hardware-Guide-pwnd-the-industry-then-lost-it
Let’s put this into
perspective.
MacPadd is just a mouse pad!
The MacPadd product was created by the owner, for the owner. There
were many other people who saw the idea as it was being developed and wanted it
as well. If demand diminishes than the offering will shut down. It is not my
livelihood.
The online business effort has been interesting and up to the date of
the Tom’s Hardware incident, a fun experience.
Finally, with Nguyen’s allegations of fraud, this is a matter of
perspective or better yet ignorance.
“We researched the Tom’s
Hardware site to look for articles on Madoff, Ebers, Stanford, Global Crossing,
Enron just to name a few.
Despite these multi trillion
dollar frauds against the world, none of the Tom’s sites has a single article
about these financial and social travesties.”
Somehow Tom’s and Nguyen has now become an expert on fraud as both
prosecutor and jury. It begs the question, what are the purported experience or
educational qualifications of Tom’s or Nguyen to make this kind of allegation?
Isn’t ironic that a little $25.00 mouse pad can cause so much angst
and anger while the accusers are in a state of moral and legal ignorance.
Gizmodo’s/Gawker Media’s Term of Service
Gawker Media the owner of Gizmodo terms of service can best
be distilled as follows and in its own words;
•
Do not post threatening, harassing,
defamatory, or libelous material.
•
Do not intentionally make false or
misleading statements.
•
Do not offer to sell or buy any
product or service.
•
Do not post material that infringes
copyright.
•
Do not post information that you know
to be confidential or sensitive or otherwise in breach of the law.
•
Keep all comments relevant to the
particular GM Site where the comment is being posted.
If Gawker Media receives notice that Material posted is not in keeping
with these terms and conditions or the intended use of the Comments section
where it is posted, we reserve to right to remove the material.
It is truly disappointing
that Gizmodo would, themselves, post information on their blog site that is in
contravention of its own Terms of Service (harassing, false, defamatory,
misleading, etc.).
Definition of defamation (Wikipedia); is the
communication of a statement that makes a claim, expressly stated or implied to
be factual, that may give an individual, business, product, group, government
or nation a negative image. It is usually, but not always,[1] a requirement
that this claim be false and that the publication is communicated to
someone other than the person defamed (the claimant).
TOM’S HARDWARE POST SCRIPT
Tuan received his MacPadd
and a refund. He has yet to return the product as instructed during our last
conversation. If anyone
could claim fraud or theft it is MacPadd on an individual who has not paid for
a product he has admittedly received. This product we sent was not a
gift.
QMS Inc nor McPadd has never
or would ever contemplate or commit fraud. The challenge to anyone making
the allegation is to prove it. Fraud in Canada is the intent to deceive. We
have 8,000 customers that have not been deceived.
There have been instances where it seems either product has been lost
in the mail (national postal systems) or customers have reported missing
product in order to claim a refund. In this instance, the only entity that has
been deceived is MacPadd by misreporting. We elected to use the USA and
Canadian Postal Service. That is prevalent every step of the way in the
advertising and purchasing process.
Relative to personal comments about myself, there was nothing that was
consented to be public during our telephone conversations, nor did I authorize
my personal information to be posted on Gizmodo or Consumerist or Tom’s
Hardware. Nor was it identified that any of what would be said would be twisted
and manipulated for a media interview. In addition Nguyen took out of context
and misreported the facts for his own agenda and deranged character.
For the record, during the 13th telephone call to my home,
Nguyen asked what I was doing at that moment whereby I could not run to the
office and get him his tracking number; I responded “I was having a drink with
my wife”. After all it was Friday night and we were starting to relax for the
weekend. If that is a crime or a headline, then it should appear in every
newspaper every week for over 175,000,000 people in North America, not just
myself.
Tuan became more inquisitive and he asked what credentials I had to
operate my business I responded with my professional and academic background
(MBA, Engineer, Certified Management Account, I sit on the Board of Governors
for our profession). There was no bragging, just responses to his personally
intrusive questions. If I had known that any of this might have been fodder for
an uncredible site like Tom’s Hardware there would have been no conversation.
As the conversation became more bizarre and abusive I identified that
the conversation was over and Nguyen was getting a refund. All of what was
being said was weird. I won’t get into the verbal exchange because quite
frankly it was absurd, abusive and disrespectful. I did say that our business
relationship was over and “get out of my life” after several threats. I do not
apologize for my statement or position.
This statement made it clear that I did not want to talk to this
person ever again and I did not want him calling my house ever again.
Unfortunately that did not stop him, his friends or co-workers phone calls from
continuing to call to harass and leave abusive messages (We had the police
trace all phone calls and emails). None of what we have described should sound
like a stable person or anyone I would want to do business with. We could
advance our other findings in this matter but that would just cause the
individual to become more self-righteous and create and post more falsehoods to
satisfy his character and agenda.
The only fraud that has occurred in this instance is the multitude of
falsehoods by Nguyen on his website and the breaches of Tom’s Hardware own Code
of Conduct, and Terms of Service.
I can assure you that because of this incident, the FBI, and Canadian
Police Authorities (OPP) have been involved with respect to criminal and
telephone harassment related to Nguyen and his followers. Fortunately the
conduct, calls and emails have ceased. If anyone including the Gizmodo condones
or wishes to incite threatening phone calls, emails or online conduct then that
should be declared in your terms of service; but we thought Gawker Media had a
better reputation than to condone that type of behaviour.
This is a record and statement of an incident falsely and
irresponsibly reported by Tom’s Hardware and Gizmodo. We applaud Consumers who
had the decency to realize a mistake and correct it. We believe Gizmodo should
have enough character to do the same. Tom’s Hardware and Nguyen are beyond hope
and we are considering legal remedies in this matter.
The Creator
of MacPadd
H1N1
There have
been incidental comments regarding our website statement that Macpadd and its
resistance to the H1N1 virus. We state that we are one of the few if not only
mouse pads whereby its surface can be “disinfected by a wipe” (Lysol or
Clorox). Our product is currently are being considered in government and one of
the largest hospital environments in Canada.