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by Toady
5444 days ago
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That's incorrect. You can read the ruling for yourself: http://www.copiepresse.be/pdf/Copiepresse%20-%20ruling%20app... The decision was pertaining to the use of lead paragraphs and other excerpts from copyrighted articles in the Google News aggregator. It didn't refer to plain links in the general search engine. I see that my comments in this discussion are being voted down for pointing this out, which is bizarre. I'm simply stating the truth and correcting posts that mistakenly assume the lawsuit was in reference to ALL links in the search engine. Voting me down is incredibly lame. I believe that Google is deliberately misinterpreting the decision, likely to remind content-owners that Google controls their source of online revenue and to therefore back off. Google has a history of being defiant with regards to this lawsuit, ignoring a court order to publish the court's decision on their Belgian websites, so they would surely have no problem doing something retaliatory under the guise of following the court's decision. |
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Before posting the above link, You failed to provide quotation supporting your statements, and there were quotes saying otherwise :-)
Let's see, the original ruling went:
(page 9, 2nd paragraph)However, there is amended ruling listed on page 47 reads:
which confirms your story. Thanks for being persistent!----
At any rate, this lawsuit is bullshit, and should be called out till they blush. The webserver has been likened to house left with doors wide open and robbed in absence of the owner (page 36.). Seriously?
What The Copiepresse actually did was like having welcome guests for a long time, and then suddenly suing them for enjoying themselves.
The argument of META tags and robots.txt was raised:
but rejected on weird reasoning: (page 35.) I say, it's the same as with law or court orders: doesn't technically prevent, just informs what is allowed and what is not.----
For a wider picture: the newspapers joined (by publishing public websites) a well established space: the Internet. It takes serious incompetence -- or malice -- to move somewhere and not follow well-documented, mutually-benefiting local rules.
Let's be clear: Google is no schoolyard bully here -- even if it was elsewhere the other day -- and newspapers are no victim. If anything, it's newspapers that advanced from large, slowly grinding company to a fast, focused start-up and found: their playbook hopelessly inadequate, their narrow field of view constraining.