Southwest Airlines demands that flight website Kiwi provides details about its ties with Skiplagged, in the latest stage of an escalating legal battle

  • Southwest Airlines in a court filing sought info about Kiwi.com's relationship with Skiplagged.

  • The move was a "distraction," a Kiwi spokesperson said.

  • Southwest said the two sites broke its terms of service by displaying fares.

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Flight website Kiwi.com said Southwest Airline's legal maneuvering to get more information about the site's relationship with another website, Skiplagged, was a "distraction."

It comes after Southwest sued Kiwi and Skiplagged in federal court in Texas, saying both sites broke the airline's website's terms of service by displaying its flights.

The airline said the two sites were working cooperatively, sending traffic to each other, and adding extra fees. The airline filed a motion seeking additional information about the relationship between Kiwi and Skiplagged.

Kiwi in a court filing said Southwest's proposal for extra information gathering would "cause undue delay" but not provide any information that would help Southwest's lawsuit.

"Adding information that is not new to Southwest, more than three months after all the motions have been filed, confirms the sense of panic emanating from Southwest," a Kiwi spokesperson told Insider on Friday. "This is just a distraction - the focus should be on whether a company like Southwest can publish information openly on the internet and then sue for accessing the same data."

A Southwest spokesperson declined to comment on a pending lawsuit.

"Neither Skiplagged nor Kiwi is authorized to display Southwest fares or sell Southwest flights," the airline's lawyers wrote in its complaint.

The airline has said in court documents and letters that Skiplagged sends traffic to Kiwi.com to purchase Southwest fares, including "hidden-city" fares.

In a filing on Thursday, Kiwi included a brief timeline of its relationship with both Skiplagged and Southwest. Skiplagged began sending traffic to Kiwi.com in 2016, the filing said.

In November 2016, traffic from Skiplagged to Kiwi.com resulted in a Southwest purchase for the first time. Traffic flowing from Skiplagged to Kiwi.com to Southwest grew through 2018, before "stabilizing" in 2019, the filing said.

Kiwi said it had "brokered some hidden-city flights where the traffic source was Skiplagged.com."

"At Kiwi.com, we just wish to gather all the available information for consumers about the best available routes and fares without the threat of legal action," a company spokesperson said.

Skiplagged had filed a pre-emptive lawsuit in New York, its home state, asking a judge to rule on whether it had broken Southwest's terms. Southwest then filed a lawsuit against Skiplagged in Texas.

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