| > But wait, you haven't added any new information. You've just re-stated the information in the article. Yes because from the little that you wrote, it didn't sound like you understood any of it. Maybe you should elaborate more from the start? > But that makes no difference to the fact that both were good things. You're wrong. 1. Craigslist killed two companies in the process. The worse part is that if Craigslist only listened to its users and improved their website, none of this would have even happened. 2. Now any company can stop anyone from fair use of their content. All they have to do is accuse them of Craigslists' definition of hacking under the CFAA. e.g. news sites can now potentially threaten companies like Google with the CFAA for listing their articles on Google News 3. Maybe if the scraping led to an outright copy of Craigslist's listing content I can understand. However, they were transforming that content into something more (something that Craigslist refused to do on their own site for years), kind of what Google does with search results. Moreover they were linking back to the original post (attribution). 4. Just because there's a term or clause in a TOS, it doesn't mean that it's legal. 5. The main result from this is to help maintain the entrenchment of the status quo which hurts overall innovation. Really we should start here: are you familiar with Fair Use? |
... but they didn't. Those two companies killed themselves by building their entire business off of data that the didn't have the right to use.
And it's not like they were led to believe that the data was usable. It was clearly marked as not usable, for the exact purpose they used it for.
It may be that your personal opinion is that once a piece of text is on the internet, it's fair game to use. But it's not. Thankfully.
Chances are we're both wrong (you legally and me libertarianally). But the only thing we've established here is that we disagree.