Cost vs. Benefit In Tracking Down People Using AP Content
from the what's-the-value? dept
The Associated Press (surprise, surprise) is covering that the Associated Press has signed on with some new startup that will help them scour the web to find websites that use AP content without a license. This is presented by the AP as a thing that clearly makes sense for the AP to do... though, that's not necessarily true. Doing this costs money, as well as time and effort (and lawyers) to respond to those who are using the content in an unauthorized manner. Compare that to the benefit of the AP forcing random sites that probably don't get any traffic to take the AP story they copied down. It just doesn't seem worth it. If there's a really big site using their content in an unauthorized manner, it seems likely to come to the AP's attention pretty quickly anyway. The small sites that this type of service will probably turn up aren't really costing the AP anything because they'd never license the AP content in the first place. So, if you look at the cost-benefit, you have to wonder how this could possibly make sense for the AP.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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This Will Be Done Cheaply
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Look - when I surf for news, I don't really think much about where I read it. If I go to Joe Blow's site and read an AP article, I most likely will go to the AP's website and read it there. Usually getting lost in other pages on their site now.
They should consider it free advertising, but whatever.
Just like the RIAA - happy to sue someone for a dime.
But that brings up another question - if the news quotes something I say - without my express permission, can I send them a cease and desist order?
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Just A PR Stunt
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besides if more ppl start using there method this technology will progress and eventually will get cheaper (I think)
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Cornflakes, Aisle Four
How about quoting information from an AP story and commenting on it? Is that OK. None of this is properly explained in the original news story.
If we're going to get to the the point where can't link to information that's available on the WWW without paying someone or we'll all get sued, what use is the WWW?
....talk about killing the goose that laid the golden egg!
Someone should tell these dickheads the Internet was invented to share information, not to greedily wall it off into tens of millions of tiny little 'castles' and then sell it off piece by piece to the serfs who can afford to be the highest bidders.
I'm beginning to really, really hate large corporations. They're taking something as magnificent and important to all mankind as the Internet and turning it into a grocery store to sell boxes of corn flakes.
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Re: there vs. their
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Why not make deals instead?
Oh, wait, that's right... the AP doesn't have its own source site. I presume that AP was given this choice at some point, but balked at the cost + the possible reneg'ing of deals already made with previous customers.
The Internet has already changed the world; what we are seeing is the catch-up cycle. Sometimes it's stunningly innovative, but for the most part, it's greedy lawyers making it worse than it already is.
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AP Attributor
Intelligence about how content is used enables content feedback from site publisher channels that are closer to their users than AP could possibly be.
Content benefits and the ultimate user benefits.
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can't be stopped
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Re: This Will Be Done Cheaply
From my understanding, when you get a takedown notice, you only have two options. Option one, remove the content right away. Option two,hire a lawyer to protect you. Ignoring the notice because you think it is in error is not an option. Who pays the legal costs of the people who get these notices when they are false? Seems like there should be a penalty for sending out false takedown notices.
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AP Is The Worst of the Worst
That they would spend a truckload of money to catch a few dopers who still think AP is still relevant just proves my first statement.
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Re: Re: This Will Be Done Cheaply
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Re: Re: there vs. their
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RIAA DEJA VOODOOIE?
AP copies are not unlike the childhood collection, of anything, that gets tossed by your parents when you venture out on your own or the first time it catches your wife's attention.
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Bandwidth theft
Where they are going to have trouble is that many reports on the same events are inevitably going to use the same words to describe the same events. If there is a direct quote from a participant they are going to use identical sentences. Indeed, it is possible that what this will wind up showing is that AP writers are copying the content from other sites to produce their own stories.
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Re: Bandwidth theft
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Not everything is about Cost VS benefit
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Re: Re: Re: there vs. their
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NOT TRUE.
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Re: Re: Bandwidth theft
I kinda agree with you, but that statement you just made says that robots.txt should be ignored by all crawlers. I suppose it's legal, but it's not very nice.
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Re: Bandwidth theft
Good point re the plagiarised articles - I for one will find it interesting when the first wave of counter DMCAs come in, from sites who have had their stuff stolen by AP NewSloths, and didn't realise until the AP kindly told them
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optimism
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