Murdoch Gets His Feet Wet In Bringing Hot News Lawsuit Against Briefing.com
from the and-here-we-go dept
Well, you had to know this was going to happen. In the last year, there had been an awful lot of talk about a previously considered obsolete concept of "hot news" -- which created a copyright-like protection for factual information, without any statutory basis. It's a very troubling concept that shouldn't have any real basis in the law, but does exist due to a nearly century old Supreme Court case. Lots of news publishers have started making noises about "hot news," and in March we had the first ruling that blocked a publication from reposting factual information under a "hot news" claim. Once that ruling was made, you had to know that more lawsuits would follow pretty quickly.And off we go. What's interesting here is that it appears that it's Rupert Murdoch testing the waters this time. Murdoch, of course, has been making odd claims about Google "stealing" content, while also suggesting that fair use doesn't exist. But rather than take on Google in court, it looks like Murdoch is targeting easier prey. Murdoch-owned Dow Jones is suing Briefing.com for copyright infringement and hot news appropriation. You can read the full complaint below:
Either way, my guess is that this particular lawsuit has little to do with Briefing.com -- or even Dow Jones and its newswires. This is Murdoch testing the waters on hot news. Of course, he may come to seriously regret doing so, given how many of his own sites probably violate the same hot news concept.
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Filed Under: hot news, rupert murdoch
Companies: dow jones
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A material what? Is that the best the AC can do?
Did you not learn anything in elemantary school about capitalization?
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DOW scrapes headlines and content from others.
I'd like to point out that DOW JONES does this ALL THE TIME.
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I wonder if Briefing had waited an hour to post the headlines, does it still count as hot news?
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Stay classy Dow
TAM?
So many things wrong with this opening statement alone. No one told them the interwebs is an inherently free rider tolerant system.
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Re: Stay classy Dow
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asymmetry
There's a biiiig difference between a case that Rupert Murdoch can win, and a case that you could win against Rupert Murdoch.
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Re: asymmetry
The "hot news" doctrine is a lot different now than it was when it was created. We no longer have just three news organizations reporting news. If one blogger gets out a news story that happens to have the same headline as a New York Times news story the next day, he could be on the losing end of a lawsuit.
With patent trolling becoming a big deal, it seems like it may be profitable to create a website that generates headlines about every major political figure and celebrity every day and then just file suits against news organizations that happen to have a similar headline the next day.
Wait - I think I just cam up with a new business idea...
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This is just horrible!
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Well.........................
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Whats going on with this blog?
Maybe it's just me but I see a consorted effort to diminish the credibility of this blog, by making it's community look like fools.
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Re: Whats going on with this blog?
People on the internet have been routing around user inputted garbage for over a decade. A little more won't change very much.
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ignore the bs
And who gives a damn about what TAM thinks?
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That's too funny!
I knew you were full of it, but that is amazing.
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I just have to ask: Am I to believe that you wouldn't object if an unauthorized person were selling your posts verbatim and cutting into your traffic?
I'll go ahead and say that you or your employer would object.
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