By
Greg Sandoval
Tuesday, April 07 2009 09:17 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,62052923,00.htm
Traditional media is once again rattling sabers in the direction of Google
and other sites that aggregate the news.
There's tough talk coming from managers at the Wall Street Journal and the
Associated Press that include threats of legal challenges and even name calling.
"There is no doubt that certain Web sites are best described as parasites or
tech tapeworms in the intestines of the Internet," Robert Thomson, the Journal's
editor, was quoted in Australian newspaper The
Australian on Monday. "It's certainly true that readers have been
socialized--wrongly I believe--that much content should be free.... And there is
no doubt that's in the interest of aggregators like Google who have profited
from that mistaken perception. And they have little incentive to recognize the
value they are trading on that's created by others."
Also on Monday, William Dean Singleton, chairman of the AP, the century-old
news wire agency, said at the group's annual meeting in San Diego, "We can no
longer stand by and watch others walk off with our work under misguided legal
theories," according to a copy of Singleton's
statements posted to the company's Web site. "We are mad as hell and we are
not going to take it any more."
Google has long said that it provides news site owners with a means to block
the search engine from crawling its site and indexing its headlines. "Those who
publish on the Web have a lot of control over which pages should appear in
search results," Google said in a blog
post. "The key is a simple file called robots.txt that has been an industry
standard for many years. It lets a site owner control how search engines access
their Web site."
The statements from the AP and Journal coming on the same day may have some
people questioning whether there is a concerted effort going on within
traditional media. There's not according to a spokesman for the Journal.
Regardless, the statements from two stalwart print publications raises
questions about whether Google will be forced to open up a new front against a
new group of copyright owners. The search engine is currently defending itself
against a copyright-infringement lawsuit filed in 2007 by Viacom, parent company
of MTV and Paramount Pictures.
Google's plan to scan orphan books and preserve them in a database is also
being challenged. Google has an agreement with the The Authors Guild and the
Association of American Publishers to scan the books, but a group called
Consumer Watchdog says
the agreement is anticompetitive and has called on U.S. Attorney General
Eric Holder to intervene.
Google also has an agreement to use AP's content. That is perhaps why
Singleton, who is also CEO of MediaNews Group--the fourth-largest newspaper
company in the United States in terms of circulation--didn't mention the company
in the speech by name. A company spokesman said that the AP and the more than
1,000 newspapers that own the service, just want Google's help fighting the
"misappropriation of content".
Besides Google, sites such as Digg, The Drudge Report, The Huffington Post,
and Techmeme are just a few of those that aggregate headlines from news sources
and post them on their sites. Google takes a headline and a description of the
story but readers must click through to the news source's site to obtain the
full story.
This article was first published as a blog post on CNET News.