There’s always something to howl about.

Defending Redfin: Sweet Digs weblog buried by inane MLS rules

I don’t like Redfin.com. Its “business” model consists of quietly diverting its agency responsibilities to listing agents while loudly rebating its largely unearned commissions to buyers. My experience of the president of the company, Glenn Kelman, is that he is an oily liar who will say anything to draw the fawning attentions of a gullible mainstream media. I don’t care about discount real estate brokerages in general — let the market sort them out — but Redfin’s modus vivendi is to exploit defects in the real estate industry — that it cannot get along without — while decrying those same defects in its tendentious and mendacious PR.

However: I believe in liberty before everything. Although Redfin will never enter most real estate markets — this being forbidden by a cost-structure that loses money on even the priciest of homes — it nevertheless has a valid complaint when it draws attention to anti-rebating and minimum-service real estate laws. The National Association of Realtors is an anti-capitalist cartel, as are state and local Realtors’ associations and local MLS systems. They are liars just like Kelman, loudly proclaiming their protection of the consumer’s interests while quietly enacting every Rotarian Socialist scheme they can think up.

Today John Cook’s Venture Blog reports that Redfin is being fined and forced to shut down one of its weblogs for violating one of those schemes:

The Northwest Multiple Listing Service has fined Redfin $50,000 and asked them to stop publishing a popular blog in which contractors for the online real estate brokerage posted reviews of Seattle area homes.

Redfin is appealing the fine, though it took steps this week to shut down the reviews on its “Sweet Digs” blog. With about 3,000 e-mail and online subscribers, the blog was written by 15 freelance reviewers who over the past five months posted reviews on about 1,000 homes in Seattle and San Francisco. The company says it plans to maintain the blog as a source of information on pricing trends and recently sold homes.

Redfin Chief Executive Glenn Kelman said he had no choice but to comply, noting that the NWMLS had threatened to shut off its daily feed of for sale listings.

“Access to listing data is our lifeblood and we just can’t afford to mess around,” said Kelman. “We have gone back and forth with the Northwest Multiple Listing Service and according to their rules you can’t advertise another broker’s listing. We argued that it was in no way an advertisement, it was really a review.”

Kelman said he was disappointed with the disciplinary action, noting that Redfin was trying to disseminate different perspectives on homes from what one might receive from a real estate agent.

This is absurd. Where any thoughtful person would understand advertising to mean that stuff that newspapers and broadcast outlets used to be able to sell before the internet came along, NWMLS seems to be arguing that any public mention of a listed property by a member is advertising. As with the idiot stunt being attempted by the Arizona Board of Appraisal with respect to Zillow.com’s “Zestimates,” the interpretation of the rules is so broad as to forbid free speech.

Presumably the same rule will be brought to bear against any NWMLS members who are using Zillow.com, Trulia.com or other on-line real estate portals to exhibit or discuss listed properties. We seem to be moving, by inches and hours, from the bogus interpretation of the First Amendment that commercial speech is not protected speech to an even more ludicrous idea: All speech is commercial speech.

This is a hideously stupid ruling on the part of NWMLS — not alone because Kelman is so good at milking these contretemps with the press and with the FTC/DOJ gangsters. Gresham might argue that bad local rules are driven out by even worse Federal regulations.

In any case, Kelman has proved himself oily enough to slip around rules before. Perhaps the Sweet Digs site can be spun off to its own separate operating entity, with an ad-supported business model. Amazingly enough, ordinary citizens have the right to free speech in America, provided they are not so foolish as to have joined the Northwest Multiple Listing Service.

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