Well, but to compare here you'd have to say they were
inspired by Rand McNally, in which case I wouldn't have a problem.
At any rate, I find the whole thing a bit odd, and I do agree that CI is more like a little mom-and-pop operation. I don't mind CI charging for the use of their website, considering their dedication to preventing conflicts of interest with advertisers. However, I usually subscribe for a month, get what I need, and unsubscribe (and typically buy the magazine similarly, in single copies) While I like the quality recipes and the TV show, I don't find it enjoyable enough reading to warrant a subscription - unlike Gourmet and Bon Appetit, (yes, I read them for the articles!) whose free website I use all the time, although I am a subscriber. I don't even mind that CI protects this asset: it was more the global implications here bother me; I spend a lot of time adapting recipes and sharing them - and my understanding is that this is OK. I suppose if the conversation had gone more along the lines of a request, e.g.: 'Cook's Country brand relies on the subscriptions and depends on the recipes as our only marketable asset and we
ask that you please remove the reference to the mag,' none of this would have happened. (If it isn't listed as the "Cook's Country Potato Salad" it's just any old salad and they shouldn't lose customers who would search for it by name)
Of course, I don't think anyone should boycott CC, and will continue my one-off purchases, as I think they're a good business - but they did touch a nerve, and I'm just surprised they haven't responded in some way.
I also wanted to add (in an edit, forgive me if you read this post and missed this) that I find it doubly interesting that, although this link has traveled across the internet like wildfire, nobody has gone back and asked Cooks Country about it, although the email address for the publisher in question is right on their site...