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Your Weekly 'Step Forth' into the World of Search Engines
Wednesday - September 20th, 2006

Highlight of the Week
> Are Search Engine Spiders Infringing on Copyright?
Belgium Speaks Out

Major Players Update
> Microsoft Hits Market with YouTube Competitor
Net Reality
> Google Goes Interstellar
> ISP Data Subject to Government Perusal?
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Highlight of the Week

Are Search Engine Spiders Infringing on Copyright? Belgium Speaks Out

Last Friday (Sept 15 th) a Belgium court dealt a stunning blow against Google and its Google News search service. The court is now forbidding the popular search engine from indexing Belgian newspaper content without paying each newspaper for the use of their content.

The ruling requires Google to remove the plaintiff’s newspaper content from its search engine database within 10 days or face threatened fines of 1,000,000- € per day. In addition, Google must publish “in a visible and clear manner and without any commentary from her part the entire intervening judgment on the home pages of ‘google.be’ and of ‘news.google.be’ for a continuous period of 5 days within 10 days… under penalty of a daily fine of 500,000- € per day of delay.” (source website and original legal document)

This ruling signifies a strong precedent for other newspapers to follow and ultimately brings up a tempting legal option for all of those sue-happy “people” out there; “if my site is copyrighted… can I sue Google for indexing it?” The fact is newspapers with an online presence are bound to jump in on the action and try to get a little financial love from the major search engines and precedent like this just urges them on. Danny Sullivan published an extremely informative article today where he describes his interview with the Belgian group that led this successful case against Google. In this article he notes that Google CEO Eric Schmidt cut to the chase and sensibly summarized this legal nightmare as “business negotiation being done in a courtroom.” I must agree because there is no question the path news companies are taking to get their needs met is ass-backwards.

Just consider the following:

  1. Google drove traffic to Belgian news sites ultimately making these sites money; their advertisers got more visibility and they got more subscribers.
  2. Belgian news sites took Google to court to have their copyrighted material removed because they felt Google should not be able to use it without paying for it.
  3. By winning their case Belgian news sites have now been removed from Google and ultimately the news sites will lose money by their online exposure being severely decreased.

To put this in another perspective if this was your business; would you spend money to go to court with the ultimate goal of losing money by losing online presence in the hopes that Google will pay you to get your content back later? Seems like a silly gamble to me and based entirely on the pursuit of ego.

The simple fact is that newspapers make money by getting free exposure from search giants like Google. Now they are biting the hand that feeds them. In that vein, the World Association of Newspapers (WAN) is taking a different, more sensible step to locate a technological solution to the problem without going immediately to court.Based in Paris, WAN represents 18,000 newspapers from around the world. According to WAN, two options have been considered at this early juncture:

  1. Pay Royalties: search engines that pay an essential royalty will then be allowed to present copyrighted content within their search engine results for a limited time. If they don’t pay then the content will be blocked and this must be respected by the search engines as a whole.
  2. New Robot Limiting Capabilities: the search engines need to acknowledge and follow an instructive file that could be provided by news sites which would define limits for the use of copyrighted information on their site.

How serious is WAN? Apparently a number of WAN members have separately launched legal proceedings against Google over the “Napsterisation” (illegal use) of stories on its website.

Here is a January 31 st article discussing this issue: Newspaper, Magazine and Book Publisher Organizations to Address Search Engine Practices.

My Take
Google has been paying the Associated Press (AP) for content for a while now under the reasoning that Google expects to use AP content within a new Google News offering later this year. Other news companies see this paid arrangement as additional precedent that Google should be paying for their content.

At this time WAN as a whole has not legally moved against the major search engines for infringement but has decided to try and find a solution amenable to both the search engines and WAN. I believe the search engines are smart enough to know that finding some middle ground is worth their time. I expect that between the two industries a solution such as new WAN-approved licensing Meta tags or robots.txt tags added over the next year to tackle the use and expiration of copyrighted content.

By Ross Dunn - CEO

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The Major Players

Microsoft Hits Market with YouTube Competitor

While it is currently by invitation only, Monday night, Microsoft released a beta version of Soapbox to compete with the highly successful YouTube. Currently you can request an invitation; however, when clicking the link I was presented with an error “Oops. It's not anything you did--it's us. Our site's down. Please try again later.” No real surprise here, after all it is a Microsoft Beta.

YouTube is the ultimate video sharing venue attracting 34 million visitors in August according to Nielsen/NetRatings. Users worldwide can upload and share their videos in just about every category imaginable.

How big will soapbox get? Well, YouTube has exploded on the web, and certainly a property owned by Microsoft will have the same potential. Whether or not they will be able to surpass YouTube will have to wait to be seen. Currently in Beta, as with many other online Microsoft properties, it could be years until soapbox is officially released, (although I would expect it to be live sooner than later).

Interestingly enough, the soapbox name is previously trademarked by a messaging company Conversant. It will be interesting to see what happens in the future, will Microsoft change the name? Will they buy them out? Will lawsuits be in the future? I am a bit surprised that a company such as Microsoft which attacks anyone infringing on their own trademarks, would wind up infringing on someone else. You think they would do their research.

by Scott Van Achte - Senior SEO

The Net Reality

Google Goes Interstellar

Google Earth has been around for some time. I remember back when it was still Keyhole and I had downloaded a free trial version. I remember showing friends who were amazed. Keyhole has evolved into Google Earth and now nearly everyone has seen, or at least heard of it.

Now there is Google Moon. (Its actually been online for a while now). Take a look at the landing sites for past space missions and zoom right in for a detailed look at the surface of the moon!

This system is quite basic right now but perhaps some day they will have “Google Earth style” moon, Mars, Mercury and beyond! Maybe Google Universe will debut soon!


ISP Data Subject to Government Perusal

In an effort to help fight child pornography, US Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales said that Congress should require ISP’s to preserve customer records.

Currently most major ISPs retain information anywhere from a few days to a year. Gonzales and FBI Director Robert Mueller had met with several major providers indicating that records should be saved for two years.

This user data should be kept by the ISP’s and only obtainable by a subpoena if needed in an investigation according to Justice Department officials. While the cause of fighting and deterring child porn is certainly very important, one must wonder what else could be done with these records.

 

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