Austria Wants To Bring In Google Tax For Snippets -- Including Single Words
from the how-low-can-you-go? dept
Here on Techdirt, we have been following with a certain bemusement attempts by a number of European governments to bring in laws that would grant newspaper and magazine owners a special "ancillary" copyright over snippets -- actually a thinly-disguised attempt to tax Google. Despite the miserable failure of this ploy, Austria has decided it wants to join the club, as reported here by the Initiative Against Ancillary Copyright site:
The Austrian proposal is very similar to the German law. Producers of "newspapers and magazines" shall be granted an exclusive right only against commercial providers of search engines and news aggregators. As in Germany, this right is also supposed to only last for one year. But there remains one big difference: The draft does not include an exception for "single words and shortest text-snippets" which expands the scope of the right tremendously!
That's something of an understatement.
Assuming Austria goes ahead and brings in this change (it's currently a draft amendment to the country's copyright law), it will surely learn the hard way that it doesn't help publishers. What's more worrying is that there is an amendment (number 204 - pdf) to the proposed revision of the EU copyright directive, that seeks to bring in this crazy idea across all 28 member states:
Notes that the current legal framework provides for neighbouring rights for performers, phonogram producers, film producers and broadcasting companies, but not for press publishers; calls on the Commission, therefore, to analyse whether neighbouring rights for press publishers can provide appropriate protection and remuneration for their work in a digital media world;
There's an important vote on Tuesday that will determine whether that amendment is adopted, along with some of the hundreds of others that have been proposed. Let's hope that the European politicians bear in mind how badly the idea has turned out every time it has been tried before.
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Filed Under: aggregators, ancillary, ancillary rights, austria, copyright, germany, google tax, snippets
Companies: google
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Five minutes, max
Country passes law to tax Google for showing snippets or newspaper sues to try and shake some money out of Google...
Google responds by pulling the snippets completely rather than paying...
Newspapers and others who have just lost the free advertising and see their traffic drop like a rock scream their heads off about how 'unfair' and 'vindictive' Google is being...
Law is repealed/Lawsuit is dropped.
I know it's mostly posturing, trying to look like they're 'standing up for the local papers', but really, it's not like this is the first time this has been tried, and it never works(for one thing Google can't afford to give in, even once, or everyone will come demanding to be paid for the free advertising they're handing out). For once couldn't they just skip the pathetic theatrics and drop the bills/lawsuits before a bunch of time and money is wasted?
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Their twisted logic.
Google has lots of money.
Therefore our words must be worth lots of money.
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Re: Five minutes, max
I agree, I didn't think anyone could be this dumb and try for a 4th time to implement it in Europe.
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I'm a performer and I have a dictionary and I have read every word aloud (*). Now everyone give me all your money. Or I will get very upset. And even if you give me all your money I will get very upset when another person reads all 'my' words and demands money from me.
* What is the definition of 'performer'? Is there some European Union register of 'performers'? I didn't think so.
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Dibs!
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Re: Dibs!
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From Techdirt's Memory Hole:
Same principle. Sure, Google is a bit more complex, but no matter how analyzed, doesn't create any value of its own. Nor is apparently subject to any pesky control from the US gov't, buys politicians and media flak wholesale.*
GOOGLE IS SO LITTLE TAXED THAT ANY IS HUGE INCREASE. Not only "legal" dodges but keeps that in fake "offshore" accounts. More or less random of dozens easily found:
"Fury at Google's L12m tax bill on sales of L3bn: 'Paltry' sum attacked by MPs who call for action to force Internet giant to pay more"
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2439760/Fury-Googles-12m-tax-sales-3bn-Paltry-sum-attac ked-MPs.html
12,000,000 / 3,000,000,000 = FOUR TENTHS OF ONE PERCENT.
* And why is there never items unfavorable to Google here? (That aren't first in the NYTimes to show is okay to carp a bit.) -- Just take the Copia link at bottom of any Techdirt page, look for Google's logo at Masnick's "think tank". It's amazing how brazen Masnick is, shows how never questioned by fanboys. Anyone dissenting they accuse of shills without least evidence, but Masnick can STATE "sponsorship" by Google and show its logo!
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From Techdirt's Memory Hole:
Same principle. Sure, Google is a bit more complex, but no matter how analyzed, doesn't create any value of its own. Nor is apparently subject to any pesky control from the US gov't, buys politicians and media flak wholesale.*
GOOGLE IS SO LITTLE TAXED THAT ANY IS HUGE INCREASE. Not only "legal" dodges but keeps that in fake "offshore" accounts. More or less random of dozens easily found:
"Fury at Google's L12m tax bill on sales of L3bn: 'Paltry' sum attacked by MPs who call for action to force Internet giant to pay more"
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2439760/Fury-Googles-12m-tax-sales-3bn-Paltry-sum-attac ked-MPs.html
12,000,000 / 3,000,000,000 = FOUR TENTHS OF ONE PERCENT.
* And why is there never items unfavorable to Google here? (That aren't first in the NYTimes to show is okay to carp a bit.) -- Just take the Copia link at bottom of any Techdirt page, look for Google's logo at Masnick's "think tank". It's amazing how brazen Masnick is, shows how never questioned by fanboys. Anyone dissenting they accuse of shills without least evidence, but Masnick can STATE "sponsorship" by Google and show its logo!
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Re: From Techdirt's Memory Hole:
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Moving_the_goalposts
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Re: From Techdirt's Memory Hole:
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Re: From Techdirt's Memory Hole:
So, here are some quotes that illustrate the differences between the Meltwater case and what Google is currently doing.
"Furthermore, the court made the distinction that, unlike public search engines, Meltwater's search service was a commercial product closed off to paid subscribers."
"Meltwater copied 4.5% - 60% per Registered Article, including the lede which summarizes the article. Meltwater failed to show that it copied this data for the functionality of its search engine."
Additionally, while this case was going on, a nearly identical case was going on in the UK. In that one, Meltwater eventually came out on top.
So, to summarize: In response to reporting about a European law, you pull out a U.S. case that has enough relevant differences to be completely unrelated, even in the U.S. And you want us to take you seriously? Try again.
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Taxing a single word?
And would that result in news articles identifying Austria as "country that shall not be named"?
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Re: Their twisted logic.
What about letters of the alphabet?
(the subtitle on TD said: how low can you go?)
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I would just love to be sitting on the sidelines with the popcorn when Google says 'no news links for you then'?
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Why? Because Google is willing to forego whatever profit is involved, and the newspapers ... aren't.
Clearly, then, by all the economic analysis that's within the intellectual reach of MBA's, newspapers _should_ pay search engines to be included.
But some issues transcend the understanding of a newspaper publisher, or MBA, or any other kind of moron. People expect search engines to be "fair" -- and anything that smacks of ulterior motives--such as bribes or strong-arming to get results (you could say "paid" or "compelled")--destroys most of the value of the search results.
In words even an ancient uneducated peasant or slave could understand, this is killing the goose that lays your golden eggs.
Where do these publishing companies find executives that are so stupid? (Don't tell me, I know, it has to be graduates of MBA programs.)
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However, if you wish for us to do so in the future the rate you will have to pay us is..."
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Re: Their twisted logic.
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No value?
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No value?
"Same principle. Sure, Google is a bit more complex, but no matter how analyzed, doesn't create any value of its own."
Not true. It provides value in that people can find the content they are looking for. If folks can't find something, the content might as well not to have been written at all. If the author can't figure out how to make money from having the content viewed, that's their problem, not Google's.
There is a simple solution for Google here: If you fail to wave the fees imposed under this law, Google doesn't index your content. People never see it, you go out of business as you deserve.
I remember the old Heinlein short story about a disruptive technology. The main idea was "If you want to stop my new and disruptive business, then I will open a whale oil lamp business and demand the courts shut down that new newfangled power generator business because it hurts my ability to sell whale oil for lighting."
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Re: From Techdirt's Memory Hole:
Unless helping people find stuff they're looking for? You asshat shills are so dumb, you're not even wrong.
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Re: Five minutes, max
And publishers run to the government complaining about Google abusing their "monopoly" which in turn makes clueless/corrupt politicians ramp up the rhetoric on breaking up Google. As is happening in Germany right now.
You guys are far too optimistic about common sense.
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Re: From Techdirt's Memory Hole:
They use the same loopholes as every major corporation. Why are you particularly obsessed with this one?
"* And why is there never items unfavorable to Google here? "
Why can you never seem to see those items whenever they're pointed out to them. Wilful ignorance is a not a virtue.
"Just take the Copia link at bottom of any Techdirt page"
The one you masturbated over for about 3 days here, as if you'd suddenly found a hidden agenda by finding... a publicly announced sponsorship on a different site that's been fully disclosed? Do you have any evidence that editorial on this site if affected by the sponsorship, or do you just cream yourself over the positive Google stories written here (while ignoring the negative ones)?
I think we all know the answer, you tiny pathetic man, you.
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Re: Re: From Techdirt's Memory Hole:
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Farewell free, hello paywall.
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Re: Re: Five minutes, max
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Re: Farewell free, hello paywall.
That would tend to make search results worse, which is bad for Google.
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Re: Re: Farewell free, hello paywall.
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