I don't think so in this case as its nothing more then a online database, they might be charging for it. I honestly didn't pay that much attention too it... and here is why.
It only applys to hand guns that are shiped into CA. Now remember for that FFL to realse that gun to you, it must be on the current safe hand gun list. So there is no need to go thru all that hassle as chances are a FFL in CA has one in stock, since that would be a instate transfer this law would not apply.
CA currently does not have a cap on prices for non face to face transactions. So you can already get skrewed by a FFL for it. Many charge $50+ DROS. I can't really say I blame them, when things go smoothly its a few mins and a couple log entrys, when things go bad, well lets just say you have a gun in your inventory, that you can't sell, can't return and have to keep track of. I've seen it happen more then once on a Private party transfer. The buyer fails the back ground check, and so does the owner... So the gun stays in limbo, nothing you can do about... just keep it locked up and on the books. Both federal and CA state laws are very complcated and ass backward.