This is from the WSJ Online this afternoon:
"The University of Michigan's consumer-sentiment survey is one of the market's more controversial economic indicators. While closely watched, the report is released to subscribers only, on a twice monthly basis, through a conference call and via the Web site of the organization.
The final monthly reading of the report is also released publicly, but not until several hours after the information is given to subscribers. The mid-month release, around which this investigation centers, isn't released publicly."
If I understand this correctly, it seems that the survey people are upset that a wide number of people got the non-public survey information, rather than solely its paying subscribers getting the non-public information. (Since it is private info, it is legal to sell it to subscribers and then to release it to the public.)
The whole thing is strange.