Publishers Seek Change in Search Result Content
explosivejared writes "The Washington Post is running a story on the fight between publishers and search engines over just what exactly is allowed to be shown by search results. From the article: 'The desire for greater control over how search engines index and display Web sites is driving an effort launched yesterday by leading news organizations and other publishers to revise a 13-year-old technology for restricting access. Currently, Google, Yahoo and other top search companies voluntarily respect a Web site's wishes as declared in a text file known as robots.txt, which a search engine's indexing software, called a crawler, knows to look for on a site ... [new] proposed extensions, known as Automated Content Access Protocol, partly grew out of those disputes. Leading the ACAP effort were groups representing publishers of newspapers, magazines, online databases, books and journals. The AP is one of dozens of organizations that have joined ACAP."
When information is power, privacy is freedom.
It figures that perl would be the root of one giant misunderstanding.
Would you kindly mod me +1 insightful?
Bustin' ACAP in Google's ass.
and if you don't want to be logged, don't chat on irc
I think it would have been better named Content Retrieval Access Protocol.
As a slashdot user, I *only* look at the summaries. I don't click to read the actual article, but learn everything I need to know about a subject simply by the summary available on google.
It works fine here, so why not on google?