Posts tagged: writers

AP Take Down Demands Seems Overreaching

The AP Should Rethink Their Policy

I’m just now digesting the Associated Press (AP) decision to issue take down notices to bloggers and website owners who quote excerpts from AP articlesJustice on their own sites. According to various reports including here and here, the news service recently started issuing DMCA (Digital Media Copyright Act) notices to offending publishers.

Boy, is someone at the AP instituting a really dumb policy.

All right, I won’t defend everyone’s right to republish excerpts of news on their sites, but the AP seems to be making a huge mistake with this blanket policy. Specifically, when someone includes a blurb from an AP article, they also provide a link back to the AP. And, I must tell you, that some of the links going back to the AP carry a lot of weight with them.

Stick Out Foot And Shoot It

At the very least, the AP is shooting themselves in the foot by cutting off their supply chain of readers. If people cannot easily find an AP article, even if only a blurb is provided, AP traffic is likely to decrease. I wonder if the folks at Reuters, Bloomberg, BBC, and other news services are clapping their hands with glee?

I am not 100% familiar with all of the particulars of the DMCA — if you read the Wikipedia entry you’ll understand why — it is quite long and somewhat hard to decipher. Regardless, the AP does have the authority to enforce the DMCA (based on Title II, infringing material), but the wisdom of doing so is likely to backfire.

The Letter Killeth

C’mon AP, lighten up. There is the spirit of the law and there is the letter of the law. By upholding the letter of the law you risk losing the goodwill of bloggers who are (for the most part) your allies in the dissemination of news, not your competitors. Unless, of course, you want to create a new breed of internet competitors who will work against, not for you.

Monday Morning Link Love

I’m swiping a page from the Pearl play book to mention a few articles I have read (or bookmarked) this week, those reads which could be of interest to you. Click a link and enjoy!

Here goes (thanks, Pearl):

The Evaporating Yellow Line Between SEO & Social Media @ aimClear Blog

Mixxed Messages @ Collective Thoughts

The Cycle of Madness @ Words On The Page

How to Commit Social Media Suicide @ SocialMediaTrader

Thinking About Ghostwriting Fees @ The Golden Pencil

Life In Hawaii: A Carnival of Aloha @ The Right Blue

7 StumbleUpon Problems I Would Love To See Fixed @ Andy Beard

The Small Fish Eats The Big Fish Paradox @ Pamil Visions’ eWritings

Maybe Next Time We Should Talk? @ Irreverent Freelancer

What I Learned From People With Magical Thinking @ A Writer’s Words, An Editor’s Eye

Weirdest Things Found In Sewers And Drains @ Life In The Fast Lane

Court Finds That Trolls Can Remain Anonymous @ Tech Crunch

What Is The Duplicate Content Penalty? @ Writing Thoughts

The Biggest Reason Small Business Owners Should Be Blogging @ eMoms At Home

Google v. Links Sales — The Worst Is Yet To Come @ iBrian

Reasons Every Blogger Should Participate In Forums @ Randy Clay Design

Have a productive week, everyone!