Belgian publishers demand up to US$77M from Google

By Anne Broache, CNET News.com
Thursday, May 29, 2008 11:33 AM

A group representing Belgian newspaper publishers is demanding that Google pay it up to 49 million euros--some US$77 million--in damages related to a lawsuit alleging the search giant linked to and cached their news stories in violation of copyright law.

According to an Associated Press report Tuesday, the group, called Copiepresse, said it has sent a legal summons to Google asking that the company appear in court in September to decide whether it should be forced to pay Copiepresse between US$51.7 million and US$77.5 million. The group also requested US$6.5 million as "provisional" payment, the AP said.

Google has already lost earlier rounds of a court dispute with Copiepresse, which has argued that Google had violated copyright law by failing to secure permission before using headlines and snippets of Belgian French- and German-language newspaper articles in its Google News aggregation service and by providing links to cached copies of the articles in the search results on its Belgium search engine.

Google, which has challenged that ruling, said on late Tuesday that it had not yet received the new Copiepresse legal summons and that it still awaits the outcome of its appeal.

"We strongly believe that Google News and Google Web search are legal, and that we have not violated Copiepresse's copyright," said Google spokesman Gabriel Stricker. "This is why we are appealing the February 2007 ruling. We consider that this new claim for damages is groundless, and we intend to vigorously challenge it."

Stricker declined to provide further details about the status of the lawsuit.

Copiepresse and Google had been in talks after the February 2007 ruling about how to reach a mutually agreeable solution. Last May, Google reportedly began reinstating links to Belgian newspaper sites in its main search results as a result of some of those negotiations.

A Copiepresse representative reached by e-mail told CNET News.com early Wednesday that the new legal action occurred because the two entities could not find an agreement, so the negotiation period ended, and the judicial process resumed.

Buzz about possible fines against the search giant, however, is not new. In November 2006, just after an initial court ruling against Google, there were reports that Copiepresse was seeking some US$53.6 million in fines, though Google promptly denied that was the case.

Copiepresse has feuded in the past with other Web companies, reaching a settlement with Microsoft.

This article was originally a blog post on CNET News.com.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.

Guest user

Guest user

Level: 
Joined: —
Already a member? Log in »



 

Loading...

Tech Jobs Now!

Secure ASP.NET sites with Membership API

Web Development

Beginning with ASP.NET 2.0, the Membership API was added to simplify adding security to a Web application. Find out how to use the Membership API with a SQL Server backend.


Read more »



  • HPC Applications

    Ever wondered if High Performing Computing systems really matter in our day-to-day world? Let Dr David Scott from Intel take you a for quick tour on developing HPC applications.
    Play video


  • Maximize IT Spend: Business Acceleration

    How do you ensure your IT solutions are well integrated and streamlined across your enterprise? Rajen from Oracle highlights the important considerations ...
    Play video


  • HPC Architecture: Explained

    Why is High Performance Computing increasingly in demand in today's businesses? Find out which is the most widely deployed HPC architecture today.
    Play video

Tags

  1. ad
  2. advertising
  3. amazon
  4. aol
  5. business
  6. china
  7. cloud
  8. computing
  9. deal
  10. ebay
  11. engine
  12. expands
  13. facebook
  14. google
  15. great
  16. hits
  17. makes
  18. microsoft
  19. net
  20. olympics
  21. online
  22. out
  23. outage
  24. privacy
  25. s3
  26. search
  27. users
  28. web
  29. yahoo
  30. yahoo-google

ZDNet Asia Top Tech 50 to recognize Asia's potential

Blog thumbnail

The ZDNet Asia Top Tech 50 awards are back, and we're once again seeking nominations to identify the industry's best-performing tech companies.

The marketplace is crowded with players clamoring for..... by Eileen Yu

Read more »