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German Government Wants Google To Pay For the Right To Link To News Sites

First time accepted submitter presroi writes "Al Jazeera is reporting on the current state of plans by the German government to amend the national copyright law. The so-called 'Leistungsschutzrecht' (neighboring right) for publishers is introducing the right for press publishers to demand financial compensation if a company such as Google wants to link to their web site. Since the New York Times reported on this issue in March this year, two draft bills have been released by the Minister of Justice and have triggered strong criticism from the entire political spectrum in Germany, companies and activist bloggers.(Full disclosure: I am being quoted by Al Jazeera in this article)"

186 comments

  1. Say what? by miffo.swe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If Google have to pay to index their sites, the news sites are the ones missing out. Unless Google are force to index them and also forced to pay, but that would in essence be a tax against a single company.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
    1. Re:Say what? by Culture20 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The news sites are miffed because search engines preview their pages in the search results, and the users just skim the results instead of clicking the links.

    2. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They can ask Google to not index them.

      captcha: retard

    3. Re:Say what? by NettiWelho · · Score: 5, Insightful

      and the users just skim the results instead of clicking the links.

      Yes, because I didnt find anything of interest during the skimming.

    4. Re:Say what? by mug+funky · · Score: 0

      a solution to that is showing the link with nothing else, but a casual surfer will just look to the next article that is a little more permissive (even if it's 9gag or some such).

      i can understand the concern that google effectively controls the internet, but hell, that's been the situation since search engines were introduced. a better engine will eventually replace google if the ads become too much to bear (they are getting that way already - ad links coming up in the address bar before the partial typing of the url you actually want, in spite of the fact that Chrome knows well what sites you go to most often).

    5. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So they'll end up with Google providing preview only those for those sites who agree to it. For free. Which probably means that all the traffic will go to those sites since people have a chance to see that it's a story they're interested in.

      --
      I don't usually reply to gweihir (88907) either. So there.

    6. Re:Say what? by mug+funky · · Score: 5, Insightful

      additionally, previewing articles in this manner can be seen as an attempt to improve search quality - news outlets are not averse to having a ridiculously inflammatory headline that has little or no relation to the article within - all to game search engines. they can't have it both ways.

    7. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There has been one case I remember, where a foto artist search engine optimized her page and afterwards tried to sue Google for showing image results. This has been dismissed by the courts, but it shows the mindset.

    8. Re:Say what? by bickerdyke · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Unless Google are force to index them and also forced to pay, but that would in essence be a tax against a single company.

      Yep, that's what they want.

      If those sites just wanted Google to stop indexind their pages, a robots.txt would be enough.

      Honi soit qui mal y pense.

      --
      bickerdyke
    9. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I hope Google stops including previews for any sites that request Google to stop.

      Google should also add a feature so that their users can choose to easily exclude such sites from their personal search results.

    10. Re:Say what? by jeti · · Score: 4, Funny

      Congratulations. You identified the "???" before the "Profit!".

    11. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eben better, they could ask to be indexed but have no excerpt. But they need Google...

    12. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "How DARE you direct readers to us, increasing our circulation and revenue, what do you think you are, some kind of search engine? Stop bringing us customers, this instant! We demand you direct them to some other business!"

    13. Re:Say what? by aaron552 · · Score: 5, Informative

      They already do. It's called robots.txt

      --
      I had a sig once. It was lost in the great storm of '09.
    14. Re:Say what? by swilver · · Score: 1

      Perhaps Google should start asking money to be included in search results, seems only fair.

    15. Re:Say what? by kasperd · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yes, because I didn't find anything of interest during the skimming.

      But users who don't find anything of interest in the article are supposed to click on the ads, which the news site put on the page. Every time a user doesn't go to the article because it isn't interesting, the news site is losing ad revenue. I don't know if they think they were entitled to that ad revenue in the first place, but I'm sure they can find a way to argue, that they were.

      --

      Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
    16. Re:Say what? by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      The news sites are miffed because search engines preview their pages in the search results, and the users just skim the results instead of clicking the links.

      ...and the reason they can't make the preview interesting enough for me to want to click it is...?

      --
      No sig today...
    17. Re:Say what? by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I hope this new law sets a fixed, mandatory price for Google to pay per link.

      That way they can't back down or renegotiate with Google when they see how stupid they've been.

      --
      No sig today...
    18. Re:Say what? by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 2

      If those sites just wanted Google to stop indexind their pages, a robots.txt would be enough.

      They don't want them to stop, they want them to pay.
      This will never pass, of course. Google and others would simply stop indexing them, making them nearly invisible. Who wants that?

    19. Re:Say what? by Tjebbe · · Score: 1

      I think GP meant the other way around, like adblock, but for google search results. You can already do it in single searches, by adding -site:, but not automatically for every search afaik.

      If I were google I'd simple remove their results altogether, and wave these proposals around the courtroom when the inevitable lawsuits come.

    20. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's amazing how "traditional" media companies struggle understanding the Internet.
      After the failures of the recording and movie industries it seems to be printed media's turn.

      Basically they're asking to be payed by a company that does free advertising for them, how stupid is that ?
      It's like asking a sales rep to pay for the right to push products to consumers, or demanding a fee from someone who recommends your products to its entourage.

    21. Re:Say what? by nospam007 · · Score: 0

      "news outlets are not averse to having a ridiculously inflammatory headline"

      It has a name: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge's_Law_of_Headlines

      "Any headline which ends in a question mark can be answered by the word 'no'".

    22. Re:Say what? by bickerdyke · · Score: 2

      money is only half of what those publishers want. The other half is forcing Google to list their pages using anti-trust laws. That may be possible as Google is big enough to be a de-facto monopoly (that's ok under EU law as it was achieved without unfair means. It's using that position to activly suppress competition that not allowed. De-listing other sites may be seen as such an unfair attack, as it is not far fetched to see Google News as a direct competitor to other news sites as newspapers)

      --
      bickerdyke
    23. Re:Say what? by mjr167 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wait... your telling me that if I want people to click on a link I need to produce a quality article? That's crazy talk.

    24. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True... but that's not what GP was talking about. Titles like "How company XYZ has single-handedly made the personal computer obsolete" when it's really just an announcement of a proposed new iPad or something.

    25. Re:Say what? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Exactly. They want Google to pay them for providing the service of indexing your site. I want construction workers to pay me to build a deck on my house. Funny thing is the construction workers want ME to pay THEM. Crazy, isn't it?

      Google will just de-list them and, since nobody remembers bookmarks or URLs, Al-Jazeera and CBSNews will be swiftly forgotten and sent to the hell of bankruptcy. Google can't de-list, say, MSN, since Microsoft is a competitor and Google has a monopoly; however if MSN demands Google pay $1 per search result, Google can refuse to pay and then be compliant with copyright demands by de-listing them. Further, Google could then refuse to ever re-list MSN ever again; and a court would have to then order Google to list them, but it would be extremely difficult because MSN initiated the "take me off your list" call and how are we going to accuse Google of abusing their monopoly now? What's your argument? Google is being abusive by declining to take advantage of a special offer to utilize a competitor's product for free?

    26. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Better yet, de-list them and - when the inevitable drop in traffic occurs and they beg to be added back - offer them the service for a fixed price per link added to the index ;-)

      Turnabout, and all that.

      Then watch the other newspapers drop all complaints against google lest they too get charged for the service google is providing. Hit 'em where it hurts, in their wallets.

      Of course, this would only strengthen Google's "control of the internet" so there are some definite downsides, but boy it would be satisfying in the short run.

      Because you know if these companies win against Google, they aren't going to stop there. "Hey, Mr. Blogger; you referenced our article! Pay up!"

    27. Re:Say what? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      BS -- the ad revenue is a result of publishing news good enough to entice users to read the articles. If they're failing that, they don't deserve it any more than a TV viewer who changes channels because a show is boring. Boring content, no ad revenue. That's pretty much guaranteed in publishing.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    28. Re:Say what? by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1

      Again, this would have to be done in the robot.txt file.
      And if such a parameter exists.

      As a user seeing the result of this, if i see a link but no preview, why-the-Fsck would I click it?
      It's looks just like the spam links in my email.

      --
      Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    29. Re:Say what? by SilentStaid · · Score: 2

      No, that's my brother, Crazy-Talk. We're all a little worried about him.

      http://www.lardlad.com/assets/quotes/season11/BABF13.shtml

    30. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But why on earth would you want to index those sites if you cannot show the links?? Just don't index them in the first place, and that's exactly what robots.txt is.

    31. Re:Say what? by lightknight · · Score: 1

      He gets it in one. We call it "breaking the internet," and it's what most governments attempt to do.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    32. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when is Google a competitor to news sites?

    33. Re:Say what? by Lennie · · Score: 1

      GoogleBot supports:

      http://support.google.com/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=35304

      That is probably the one you are looking for.

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
    34. Re:Say what? by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      How do you specify 'pay me XXX before index' in robots.txt again?

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    35. Re:Say what? by tepples · · Score: 1

      What do you think AdWords and DoubleClick are?

    36. Re:Say what? by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 0

      The problem is Google has already indexed most of them without asking. Therefore, Google has the advantage of having content from various news sites already in place, and the un-indexed sites are at a disadvantage because there are other indexed sites. The option to be excluded from the index would only have worked had Google never orignially indexed any news site without explicit permission. I realize the purpose of a search engine is to index sites and direct people toward those sites. However, Google seems to have reached a point at which it has become a content provider, displaying content from these sites and never actually directing people toward those sites.

      To some extent, they seem to be doing the same thing Gracenote did, indexing content from many sources and ultimately profiting from that content with little to return to those contributors.

      Try not to miss the point, that Google seems to have gone from a search engine to a site that actually scours the internet for content for itself, rather than directing people to the sites the content came from. I am not saying no site ever gets additional views because of a link from Google. And note that every anti-Google comment gets modded away, regardless of the validity of the comment. You may or may not agree with the validity of the comments in this post. But every anti-Google comment gets modded away, not just this one.

    37. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And note that every anti-Google comment gets modded away, regardless of the validity of the comment. You may or may not agree with the validity of the comments in this post. But every anti-Google comment gets modded away, not just this one.

      Pathetic persecution complexes don't help your argument. Just go to any Apple-related article and look at the number of "fragmentation" or "insecure app store" misinformation posts that get modded up.

    38. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google is not displaying substantial content from these site and to pretend otherwise is it either naive or trolling. All they display is the title, the source, a very short sample and sometimes a thumbnail image. This is exactly like they do for web searches.

      example:
      Wildfire nears Idaho resort town as some residents refuse to leave
      Chicago Tribune-5 hours ago
      SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) - A 91000-acre (38800-hectare) wildfire in the Boise National Forest closed in from three directions on an Idaho ...

      If the papers are concerned that users will look at that and not click through to their paper, too bad. No one is giving away their stories for free, it just means that the reader looked at the index and decided that they don't want to read that article. That is the purpose.
       

    39. Re:Say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, Google is a search engine?

    40. Re:Say what? by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      They've started already. And what did they mod it? "Overrated". In other words, "we just don't want anybody to think about what you're saying". Slashdot really would have a better site if they could work on those censorship issues.

    41. Re:Say what? by Meski · · Score: 1

      The German government want Google to *PAY* for advertising German news sites? Do they want to make the G in PIIGS a double G?

    42. Re:Say what? by Meski · · Score: 1

      Somewhat correct. But 90% (for me, anyway) of the time I do a google search, I end that search by clicking through to one or more of the sites Google found for me. Perhaps 2% of the time, this is an ad or sponsored site.

    43. Re:Say what? by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      The problem is Google has already indexed most of them without asking

      What do you mean "already"? News changes everyday , you know. Maybe every hour these days. News sites can even now block crawlers in robots.txt.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    44. Re:Say what? by kasperd · · Score: 1

      BS -- the ad revenue is a result of publishing news good enough to entice users to read the articles.

      I was being a bit sarcastic. Though I do believe that news media are trying to attract readers to boring articles through the use of sensationalistic headlines. Additionally, I have heard from at least one reliable source, that if the actual content on a page was of poor quality, then users making it to the page were more likely to click on the ads.

      But of course I don't think news media are entitled to getting attention on those articles, that are of no interest to the readers. And if we can get to a situation, where the exposure a page gets is proportional with the quality of the content, then that is a huge step in the right direction.

      a TV viewer who changes channels because a show is boring. Boring content, no ad revenue.

      It doesn't work exactly that way for webpages. For some users, the fastest way away from a boring page is clicking on one of the ads on the page. Sure, that may take them to another even more boring page, but the publisher of the first boring page made some money. TV is different, a boring TV show does not give more exposure to the ads on that channel.

      So, there are multiple factors affecting the revenue of a news media. I hope better articles does improve the revenue. But as long as there are media who think there are easier ways to improve revenue than by improving quality, then we will hear stories like this one.

      --

      Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
  2. Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google removes these sites from their results, and nobody ever visits them again. Sites die from lack of ad revenue. Ta Da!

    1. Re:Not a problem by aepurniet · · Score: 2

      this doesnt seem like a good solution for the ailing news sites. murdoch has been beating this drum for a while in the US, and nobody is listening.

      however, the sites producing content are not getting compensation for doing so, is this just a paradigm shift, or can something be done to protect some of their revenue?

    2. Re:Not a problem by Sique · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Those previews are like movie trailers. If you can't get interested by the movie trailers, no one will get you to watch the movie then, protecting revenue be pissed.

      The case roots somewhat deeper. The Perlentaucher ("pearl diver") site was compiling links to interesting articles and providing excerpts from them, and got sued for copyright infringment because the excerpts were too verbose for some of the original publishers. Perlentaucher prevailed, the courts found the excerpts to be within the "quoting" limits. So now the publishers want to get compensated for those excerpts, especially if they are automatically generated like Google's link results.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    3. Re:Not a problem by hawkinspeter · · Score: 1

      They could produce articles that are worth reading and thus get ad revenue when people go to read the full article. Or they can continue reporting whatever policy Murdoch wants to push that day.

      --
      You're a temporary arrangement of matter sliding towards oblivion in a cold, uncaring universe
    4. Re:Not a problem by bickerdyke · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Google removes those sites from their results, removed page sues because of anti-trust unfair competition.

      It's not about beeing indexed or not. it's about getting money from Google cause Google has money. And with all that money lying around, there has to be a way to get some of it.

      --
      bickerdyke
    5. Re:Not a problem by 91degrees · · Score: 0

      And Google loses market share because it doesn't have as good coverage of these sites as companies that are willing to share the revenue they generate.

    6. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Murdoch pushes policy in Germany? Oh, you must be one of those people who read an article and instantly forget that there are other places in the world outside of your context, and that not everything that has an impact on your life and the companies within it has an impact on companies thousands of miles away.

    7. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is, Google pays me handsomely (Well, If you really liked little people you'd find it handsome. Really.) for the ads they get to put on my site. These people just want to get paid without actually doing anything for Google.

      And no, 'letting' Google link to them is not something that benefits Google. People fight and cheat and hire special experts to get good ranking on Google. These companies saying Google should pay to list them is a lot like some fat guy in his mother's basement finding out that some super model said he was a nice guy, and trying to get her to pay him to say it again. Ass backwards, that's what it is.

      I'm sure if this passes Google will laugh all the way to the delete button, and the German newspapers will lose a major chunk of their incoming traffic. In other words, I couldn't care less. Let them pass the law if they want, it'll backfire on them so hard that it'll be funny to watch. And we'll be able to watch, because the rest of the world will still be happily going on as if nothing happened.

    8. Re:Not a problem by fph+il+quozientatore · · Score: 0

      If they want to squeeze some money out of big multinational corporations in Europe, the first thing to do is banning unfair fiscal tricks such as the infamous "Dutch sandwich".

      --
      My first program:

      Hell Segmentation fault

    9. Re:Not a problem by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Nope. News, unlike e.g. investigative journalism, are mostly fungible commodities.

    10. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. Those publishers'll demand ludicrious amounts that noone would vouluntarily pay.
      What they want is laws that force Google (and every other search engine, of course) to:
      - link to them,
      - pay for the privilege,
      - still not quote their article (well, maybe the headlines - if they ask nicely).

      Why?
      Because laws that force unwilling "customers" to pay for something they are then not even allowed to do is what other "intellectual property" owners have in Germany and publishers want a bigger piece of the action.
      And of course because publishers are getting desperate as sale of printed product declines and their sites offer nothing people are willing to pay for. And online ads don't pay as much as the printed ones.

    11. Re:Not a problem by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      This time it's the news publishers who want to squeeze money from google, not an entity that would profit if that money dripped out as tax money.

      In related news: banning those tricks isn't possible. They will stay possible as long as long as the involved countries profit from that too. With those tricks in place, those companies lieave little tax money in Ireland and the Netherlands. Without that, they would pay big tax money to some other country and none at all to Ireland and Netherlands.

      So there is no incentive to change those policies.

      --
      bickerdyke
    12. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Murdoch pushes policy in Germany?

      Yes. Sky Deutschland is owned by Murdoch and pushes Murdochs policy. (Germany's largest pay TV provider according to wikipedia.)

      Oh, you must be one of those people who read an article and instantly forget that there are other places in the world outside of your context

      And you must be one of those people who criticise other people without having a clue of things outside of your context.

    13. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure it can. It respects local laws, which take precedence over any EU "guidelines", therefore it will remove them from search. The laws might say Google is prohibited from indexing their news, but it doesn't tell Google HOW to do that. Paying them is one option, removing them completely is another.

      In the mean time alternative sources will still be available, since I doubt ALL news sources are risking so much for this monumentally stupid idea.

      I seem to remember in the US and UK far more powerful greedy idiots tried the same thing.

    14. Re:Not a problem by sjames · · Score: 1

      And that's why the whole thing is stupid. Any news site that chooses to charge just won't get indexed. If they want that result, they can already get it with robots.txt without wasting time and money creating a law.

    15. Re:Not a problem by moronoxyd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Murdoch pushes policy in Germany?

      Yes. Sky Deutschland is owned by Murdoch and pushes Murdochs policy. (Germany's largest pay TV provider according to wikipedia.)

      That's true.
      But your missing one relevant point: Pay TV doesn't mean shit in Germany.
      Murdoch can influence more or less nothing here.

      But we have or own 'Murdochs': The Axel Springer AG is News Corp. in German.

    16. Re:Not a problem by hawkinspeter · · Score: 0

      I wasn't aware that Murdoch limits his political interference to only one location. How foolish of me to assume that Murdoch has his fingers in lots of pies and operates in more than one country at a time.

      By the way, I live in the UK and Germany is not "thousands of miles away".

      Idiot!

      --
      You're a temporary arrangement of matter sliding towards oblivion in a cold, uncaring universe
    17. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They could produce articles that are worth reading and thus get ad revenue

      Then again, journalists are subject to some moral and we as readers don't want everything to be made into a sensation. At least I don't want that. You cannot spin every event into a watergate sensationalist story. More importantly, you shouldn't!

    18. Re:Not a problem by awrowe · · Score: 2

      Yet still they try, which is why the GP is correct. Instead of focusing on the bullshit celebrity news and presenting an old man's bladder infection as worthy of "breaking news", perhaps the journalists should start thinking about presenting relevant facts in a neutral tone and allowing readers to form their own opinion. You know, like real journalists.

      --
      A.I. Research. The peculiar science in which we know the question and we know the answer, but can't show the working
    19. Re:Not a problem by fph+il+quozientatore · · Score: 0

      The EU could enforce a minimum sales tax. I can imagine the bill will have 25 votes in favor and 2 against.

      --
      My first program:

      Hell Segmentation fault

    20. Re:Not a problem by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      Why should they vote in favour? The result would be those big companys paying their taxes in the US or Cayman Islands - not much to win for those 25. They'd rather had to stand in for the additional debts Ireland has to make to compensate for that "little" money Google left there as tax...

      --
      bickerdyke
    21. Re:Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google removes those sites from their results, removed page sues because of anti-trust unfair competition.

      It's not about beeing indexed or not. it's about getting money from Google cause Google has money. And with all that money lying around, there has to be a way to get some of it.

      There is. It's called Google AdSense.

    22. Re:Not a problem by Mana+Mana · · Score: 1

      Belgium v. Google redux. *jijiji*

      > So now the publishers want to get compensated for
      > those excerpts

      Google, go lobby Merkel's CDU, the Bundestag/rat for the right to charge German websites' indexing fees! Make the fees/indexing opt out, too. It's for their own good, your bottom line, that Myface competition is killing your margins. You need help, just like the German publishers do.

    23. Re:Not a problem by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      If they want to squeeze some money out of big multinational corporations in Europe, the first thing to do is banning unfair fiscal tricks such as the infamous "Dutch sandwich".

      I'll admit, I didn't want to click the link because I'd never heard the phrase before, but just the title sounds vaguely like some sort of perverted sexual practice.

  3. Up front payment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Will they be forced to pay up front if they are found to link to content; or simply remove sites which don't want their content indexed, with a payment charged if they fail to do so?

  4. Backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouldn't this be the otherway around? They would never, ever, ever get any traffic if no search-engines were allowed to link to them without paying

  5. Wrong reaction by c0lo · · Score: 1, Redundant
    TFA (well, the last one)

    the new conservative-liberal German Government that was elected in late 2009 declared: “Press Publishers shall not be discriminated against other disseminators of copyright protected works [e.g. film or music producers]. Therefore we aim for the introduction of a neighbouring right for press publishers to increase the protection of press publications on the Internet.”

    First... a weird thing: are the press publishers in the same league as the copyright protected works? I know that an US court allowed FauxNews the right to serve "creative fiction" as news, but I thought this should be rather an exception than the norm.

    Second... now, I know that's a fool hope, but I cannot stop myself wishing that the discrimination (... which is a wrong thing, right?...) would have been resolved by lowering the rights of the film or music producers instead of increasing the rights of the news publishers.

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    1. Re:Wrong reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      would have been resolved by lowering the rights of the film or music producers

      Not going to happen anytime soon: their hands are stuck way too deep into our politicians' pockets.

    2. Re:Wrong reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The copyright doesn't cover the information, but its presentation.

  6. Misleading summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The proposed law has nothing to do with linking to news site at all. The point is that the publishers are to be compensated if anyone takes parts of the article or the full text and displays them somewhere else. There is not even so much debate about the intention itself, I think it's only fair if you reprint significant parts of an article (and thereby deprive the original author of advertisement revenue or subscription fees), but what constitues a "significant part" of a news article? For example Google News usually shows the first few sentences under the link, is that a significant part? In my opinion it's not, but that is what the discussion is about.

    In the original draft, even single sentences would have been regarded as "significant parts", but that would then also mean that you cannot quote from any news article anymore in any other publication, which would have significant negative side effects. So, what happens now is what happens in every democracy, someone drafts a bill, other people critisize it, and we have no clue yet what is going to happen in the end.

    1. Re:Misleading summary by Hazel+Bergeron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So, what happens now is what happens in every democracy, someone drafts a bill, other people critisize it, and we have no clue yet what is going to happen in the end.

      Perhaps your democracy is not old enough to be operating optimally. In Westminster, it works like this:

      1) One or more big businesses lobby government;

      2) Government produces draft legislation to benefit these businesses, but including all sorts of bullshit in it too;

      3) There is a "debate" in which the government "concedes" to removing all the bullshit that no-one was expecting to be included anyway;

      4) The bill passes.

    2. Re:Misleading summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democracy in action... can you feel the tears of joy when you see this well-oiled machine working as intended?

    3. Re:Misleading summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes, mostly anal tears, or ruptures to be more precise. We really need a big business producing lube so the government would start using it to benefit them.

    4. Re:Misleading summary by kill-1 · · Score: 1

      In the original draft, even single sentences would have been regarded as "significant parts", but that would then also mean that you cannot quote from any news article anymore in any other publication, which would have significant negative side effects.

      You could still quote articles. But that quote has to be embedded in another non-trivial work. Aggregation of news has never been quoting in the sense of German copyright law.

    5. Re:Misleading summary by swillden · · Score: 2

      It seems like the simple solution (from Google's perspective) is still effectively what many posters are saying. If sites insist that Google pay them to include snippets in the search results, then Google should simply omit the snippets for those search results. Given the way people rely on snippets to give them an idea about whether or not the link is to what they're looking for, the result will be almost the same as if Google simply didn't link to them. Further, since Google, like all search engines, uses result clicks as a key signal to compute rankings, the snippet-less sites will quickly drop off the first page of results.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    6. Re:Misleading summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps Google and all the other search index providers should simply drop everything German-based from their search results. And while they are at it, drop those equally-nuts French results.

      Not a troll, I just find their respective governments greedy and short-sighted. Darwin, adapted to today, would demand that they simply disappear.

      ironic captcha: delete

    7. Re:Misleading summary by Kirth · · Score: 1

      ... yes, and the worst part of it would be that "publishers" suddenly can claim new rights on public domain content.

      This is a declaration of war against the public, public domain and the public good.

      --
      "The more prohibitions there are, The poorer the people will be" -- Lao Tse
    8. Re:Misleading summary by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Google News usually shows the first few sentences under the link, is that a significant part? In my opinion it's not, but that is what the discussion is about.

      It really depends on the news source. Traditionally newspaper articles, specially those written for syndication, are written in a quite annoying style in which the most important bit of information comes in the first paragraph, then each subsequent paragraph adds less and less relevant details, until you reach to the absolutely useless stuff that's there only to fill space. This is done this way so that any number of newspapers can buy the article and make it fit their wildly varying available space, as the purchasing newspaper's editor can simply chop any number of paragraphs from the end without the need to rewrite anything. Extreme example: do you know those columns in "world news" sections full of single-paragraph news bits? Each one of those is a full article from some newspaper abroad which that newspaper purchased then simply chopped down to the very first paragraph to fit the space. So, when a news aggregation service such as Google displays the first paragraph of such an article, it's effectively showing you the meat of the article, the very bit of content other newspapers actually pay for.

      The workaround for news aggregators would be to display some random paragraph from the middle down to the end of the article rather than the first paragraph. But doing so would make them useless. So you can see the accusation has merit. The best solution, however, would be for news sources to not write articles in this style to begin with. I so much despise it that it's one of the reasons I don't stand newspapers. Introduction-development-conclusion, that's how non-journalist/newspaper-editors write and pretty much prefer to read, not the other way around.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    9. Re:Misleading summary by archen · · Score: 1

      The point is that the publishers are to be compensated if anyone takes parts of the article or the full text and displays them somewhere else. There is not even so much debate about the intention itself, I think it's only fair if you reprint significant parts of an article (and thereby deprive the original author of advertisement revenue or subscription fees)

      Are only "news sites" going to be blessed with this ability? It seems the implications for this would be far reaching and very bad. It would mean that Google would have to compensate anyone who wrote an original work. If it goes beyond Google, that means any site that cross posts content may be infringing on their "revenue stream". Sounds like a nirvana for lawyers, where natural function of the Internet cause infringement based on arbitrary interpretations.

    10. Re:Misleading summary by Darkling-MHCN · · Score: 1

      I think the first few sentences of a news article are significant because most people only read the first few lines of the majority of news articles.

      This is a good move as journalism needs to have a revenue stream in order for it to stay alive and healthy.

      Who the hell wants to live on a planet in which no real journalism takes place?

      Out freedoms and personal liberties are at stake here.

  7. Yes, sadly, it is too much. by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

    Is it too much to ask that you know what the fuck you're talking about before drafting or considering a piece of legislation that affects said fucking whatever?

    1. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. by interkin3tic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm sure they knew exactly as much as about it as the lobbyists for the publishers thought they should know.

    2. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. by Cigaes · · Score: 1

      I am sure the German lawmakers know all about the workings of a search engine. And if they do not, they can ask advice to their French neighbours: I am sure they would be thrilled to explain how to use the OpenOffice firewall to prevent Google from indexing news sites.

    3. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. by Havenwar · · Score: 2

      Yes. Requiring that the people in charge knows what they are talking about would limit who could be put in charge to intelligent and rational people, which is called elitism, and that's not socially acceptable. So it is indeed too much to ask.

      However it is not too much to ask, in my opinion, that the drafter of any bills are held personally responsible for it. If say this bill passes and company A is suddenly pressing Google for X millions in compensation, Google should be able to sue the person drafting the bill, prompting a legal review by the highest legal court in the country. If the bill/law is found to be bad OR the drafter is found to have drafted it specifically to benefit the interests of companies/people they are personally involved with (like insider trading, except for law) then the law should be repealed, and the drafter should be held personally responsible for the X millions in compensation that Google would owe company A for the time the law was in effect.

      That should make most politicians think twice about what they put their name on.

    4. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. by Kjella · · Score: 1

      prompting a legal review by the highest legal court in the country. If the bill/law is found to be bad

      I'm sorry, but how could a court possibly decide if a law is good or bad? That would make the Supreme Court into some kind of unelected super-parliament of nine deciding on their own whim what laws to keep and not. Yes, they can say if a law is constitutional or not but they don't form any opinion of whether that's good or bad, Congress has passed both the law and the constitution and the Supreme Court only make sure they're consistent. Despite all the flaws in the US election system, putting the democratically elected Congress at the mercy of an small circle of appointed-for-life Supreme Justices is a really, really bad idea.

      the drafter is found to have drafted it specifically to benefit the interests of companies/people they are personally involved with (like insider trading, except for law) then the law should be repealed

      Insider trading means using inside information, even if the lawmakers write laws for campaign contribution kickbacks that's not abuse of any privileged information. It's just a "if you scratch my back I'll scratch yours" arrangement that's both very common and in most cases completely legal.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. by Havenwar · · Score: 1

      First off, you assume america here. I don't, maybe because I'm not american, maybe because the article is about Germany, maybe because the world is bigger than your little pond. However, repealing laws are indeed a normal part of the duties of the legal system in a country, or perhaps of the government in some cases. Either way it's an investigation that is handled on the highest levels of the legal system, since it's a decision that affects all lower parts of the system.

      And yes, putting a democratically elected government at the mercy of a small circle of appointed-for-life whatevers is indeed a really bad idea, and either the system in place or the suggestion would have to have safeguards built in or be changed to account for such an unbalanced system. However in arguing that the government shouldn't be at the mercy of the courts you are basically saying that they are above the law, and unaccountable for their actions in running the country. That's ludicrous and there is absolutely nothing democratic about it. Accountability is one of the most basic ways to keep people in high positions honest. After all a politician is not only supposed to act by the letter of the law, but rather in the best interest of the people. All the people, not only those that voted for them.

    6. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      That would only shift the payments to the lawmaker and the reviewer.

      Get corporate money out of politics, then you have a real fix.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    7. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. by Havenwar · · Score: 1

      Well, the people who push the bills are the lawmakers, so it would cure that. As for the reviewers, that's supposed to be a court of law like I said. If those accept bribes then it's a much more obvious problem. A politician can accept a lot of "campaigning contributions" and so on with little trouble, but a judge who suddenly received large payments of any kind from any people other than their employer - the courts - would be easy to bring under question. So if your country actually has a trouble with bribed judges, complete transparency would help get rid of that.

    8. Re:Yes, sadly, it is too much. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or they can ask the Belgians. Same story a couple of years ago -- news sites wanted money if Google crawled them, they were too stupid to modify their robots.txt, Google was forced by the court to stop crawling the sites. Result: no more links to those sites, and massive outcry from those sites that they weren't showing up in search results anymore. The decision was reversed. Way to go, really.

      JUST CHANGE YOUR FREAKING robots.txt TO DISALLOW THE GOOGLE NEWS BOT !

  8. Hypocritical ... by giorgist · · Score: 1

    There is robots.txt

    You don't want Google to link to you, update your robots.txt. It is so simple ?! Those that do will be indexed, those that don't wont and it is business as usual or lack there off.

    1. Re:Hypocritical ... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      They do want Google to link to them.

      This is a service that makes Google money. They also want some of that money.

    2. Re:Hypocritical ... by fnj · · Score: 1

      And I want a pony. Somebody send me a pony.

      Sheesh.

    3. Re:Hypocritical ... by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Convince a politician that it's only fair that you get one then.

  9. This again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on google. Just blacklist an entire country.

    No users from there can use google anything. And you don't index anything in that country at all.
    Lets see who needs the other more.

    You'd only have to do it for a short time. And it would put a complete stop to this stupid shit once and for all.
    The uproar would be glorious and epic!

    Come on. Do it already!

    1. Re:This again? by advocate_one · · Score: 5, Interesting

      did it once... in Belgium... de-listed companies that won a lawsuit (gave them what the court ordered) and they went screaming to the courts that Google was being evil...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    2. Re:This again? by swillden · · Score: 3, Informative

      And the rest of the story is that after the companies complained that they only wanted to be removed from Google News, not Google Search, Google re-indexed them in Search but did not include them in News. Also, the companies in question began using the meta "noarchive" tag to instruct Google not to cache their pages, so there is no "Cached" link when you find them in search (caching had been a major part of their complaint and Google had previously pointed out to them that they could use "noarchive", but it apparently wasn't until they were removed from the index that they agreed to use it.)

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    3. Re:This again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Google re-indexed them in Search but did not include them in News

      Please tell me they didn't include them in News because they'd modified their robots file to exclude the google news bot? PLEASE tell me Google didn't have to add an exception rule because these companies are too stupid to use the internet?

    4. Re:This again? by swillden · · Score: 1

      Google re-indexed them in Search but did not include them in News

      Please tell me they didn't include them in News because they'd modified their robots file to exclude the google news bot? PLEASE tell me Google didn't have to add an exception rule because these companies are too stupid to use the internet?

      I don't know; the article didn't say. It did say they had started to make use of the standard technologies to control what was indexed and cached. But the other is also possible.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  10. Complete topic discussed, in German by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    First of all: The so called "Leistungsschutzrecht" has already been cut back to become a "Lex Google", meaning it will (currently) only apply to Google, making it open to litigation (laws must not be tailored to one specific offender).

    The whole thing is a farce. It's been a concerted effort of German media companies trying to bully others into paying compensation. Consequently, the initiators being media companies, you won't find much criticism in the media.

    If you care to read some more about it, use google translate and go to:

    http://www.stefan-niggemeier.de/blog/ein-kartell-nutzt-seine-macht-wie-die-verlage-fuer-das-leistungsschutzrecht-kaempfen

    1. Re:Complete topic discussed, in German by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First of all: The so called "Leistungsschutzrecht" has already been cut back to become a "Lex Google", meaning it will (currently) only apply to Google

      Why would such law apply only to Google? Google is not the only search engine out there. It is biggest and most popular - but there are many smaller ones. Altavista, bing, yahoo, ... Surely, such law would apply to smaller search sites too - at least if they're operating in Germany?

    2. Re:Complete topic discussed, in German by Larryish · · Score: 1

      1. move to germany

      2. start shitty "online news" company

      3. charge google for indexing some more kardashin tripe ???

      4. profit!

  11. 2 years later... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This just in, the majority of news websites have shutdown due to lack of traffic.

  12. Bloody ignorance. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If news sites DON'T want to be indexed, just let them put up a robots file. Oh wait, they changed their mind about wanting to be indexed now?

  13. Re:I'm confused by gutnor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is plenty of stuff that are not working in EU as they do in the US, however /. is a US centric site and therefore focus on the not working part of the US and what is better outside. EU centric sites do the opposite.

    Try to think for yourself. If you just want the warm feeling that the US is the best place in the world and nobody else does anything better, just open the TV news channel lined up with you existing opinion and shut down your critical thinking.

  14. Newspapers: the biggest freeloaders on the planet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Newspapers' entire business model is to take other people's information, at the point where it is most valuable (it is new) and copy it everywhere, usually without paying the source.* I admire their hypocrisy.
    .
    * take today's front page news for example. Meles Zanawi dies: did every newspaper pay Zanawi's family for this lucrative information? Jesse Robredo's body is found. Did every newspaper pay the rescue teams for this profitable fact?

  15. wtf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, by doing this... google should un-index news sites... but then those sites would miss out on tons of free traffic, so they'll probably bitch about being unlisted... but Google can't possibly list them without being forced to pay... but if they unlist them, they might get into legal battles and sued...?

  16. From the Clarification Department by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is one of the most incomprehensible post summaries I've ever seen on Slashdot; it could have used a little TLC in the way of explanation.

    So basically the German publishers are claiming that the current copyright law be amended to make any quote from an article, even the headline, subject to a copyright licensing fee. Under current law, the headline and opening sentences of an article are in the public domain. Linking itself is free; it's the snippet quoting that Google and other sites like to do that would cost money. However, it would have disastrous consequences for blogging and online journalism as a whole, not to mention search engines, as pretty much any web page that quotes a German article would be liable to pay a fee.

    Reading the second article, it would appear that the second draft of the bill has already gotten to the point of compromise where nobody would be happy with the eventual outcome, including the publishers, so it will most likely stall or be shelved permanently. At this point, it's almost more a bullet dodged than actual news. Kudos on posting an article in which you're quoted, though.

    On a side note, the original German term seems much less ambiguous than the British English "neighboring rights" or American English "related rights". "Leistungsschutzrecht" literally means"right to protection of effort".

    --
    "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    1. Re:From the Clarification Department by bickerdyke · · Score: 2

      Slight correction: The whole of the article including first paragraph and headline is still under copyright protection and not public domain, but it may be used by others as part of fair use. (quoting in general is considered fair use)

      Something else that gets lost in translation of "Leistungsschutzrecht", is that we're nottalking aboiut the authors rights, as the news and newspapers sites usually aren't the authors. What comes closest to the proposed law is the "sweat of the brow" construct, as we're talking about compiling and providing samples from pages that usually contain compilitions of texts themselves.

      --
      bickerdyke
    2. Re:From the Clarification Department by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that there is no such thing as "copyright" in Germany. A fact that even lawmakers often get wrong because of extensive lobbying.
      We have “Urheberrecht", which is more like an "authors' right". And it is non-transferable and implicit. So yeah, this very message here, even without any "copyright" statement, is protected by this law here in Germany. And so is every work.

      The content Mafia just want to transform this well-working model into a US/UK model of "copyright", which is a distributors' right, and usually harms everybody except for the distributor... including especially the original author.

    3. Re:From the Clarification Department by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      Regarding the copyright vs. public domain: really? I was quoting from the Al Jazeera article, so perhaps the article is wrong.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    4. Re:From the Clarification Department by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      "Public Domain" in a strict sense means waiving all your rights to something. It becomes a common good. But here ownership of the parts of the articles stays with the author, even if it may be used by others for free.

      --
      bickerdyke
  17. bad translation by Tom · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Leistungsschutzrecht" has nothing to do with neighbours. The three words it is made off are Leistung which translates as "achievement, effort, performance", Schutz = "protection" and Recht = "right, law".

    It plain and simple intends to protect the efforts of the newspapers. And it is highly controversial within Germany. Basically, our news and printing industry is what your movie and music industry are - strong lobby organisations buying special rights for themselves.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:bad translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In "Leistungsschutzrecht", Leistung means "service" not achievement, effort of performance... It's not about sweating journalists...

      It should protect the services offered by news agencies, etc...

    2. Re:bad translation by Ozan · · Score: 4, Informative

      Why didn't you just google 'neighboring right' and see that it indeed is the term to use: http://itlaw.wikia.com/wiki/Neighboring_rights

    3. Re:bad translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would guess his problem with the term isn't exactly the definition, but more so the word itself. It is a very interesting construction, which implies in the current discussion that efforts aren't being protected and they're lobbying for a right to protect their efforts from other people not respecting their efforts.

      Think Stop Online Piracy Act: obviously it stops piracy and pirates are bad, so this is a good thing!

  18. Re:I'm confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're supposed to jump off the nearest tall building and hit the ground with your head.

    By doing that you'd improve the average voter quality. Do your bit for your country.

  19. Insanity by Meneth · · Score: 1
    From the article:

    The latest draft amendment proposes far less than what some German publishers sought from the beginning. Throughout the last three years that a neighbouring right has been under consideration in public hearings, the publishers have insisted that the use of its material for any commercial gain - both in the online and offline spheres - should be reflected with some recompense to them. "The example that was given at the hearing was: a bank employee reads his morning newspaper online and sees something about the steel industry, and then advises his clients to invest in certain markets," says Mathias Schindler of Wikimedia Deutschland, who has attended the hearings. "The publishers argued that the bank consultant was only able to advise his clients because of the journalistic work in the published article. So that means the publisher deserves a fair share of any money made from that scenario. This was the proposal from the start."

  20. Opt-in vs Opt-out by Frankie70 · · Score: 1

    If those sites just wanted Google to stop indexind their pages, a robots.txt would be enough.

    Normally, slashdot readers are all for opt-in as compared to opt-out. Why is it different here?

    1. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by ColaMan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because operating a webserver is basically opting-in to being part of the World Wide Web.

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    2. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by bickerdyke · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because one can safely assume that being listed in Googles index is what website operaters want. The existance of all those black- white- grey- and donkey-hat SEOs supports that assumption.

      But I partly agree, if someone would re-invent the internet and write specifications from scratch, opt-in should be the norm. But once again. THAT's NOT THE POINT here!

      Google offered those publishers who are pushing for that law, to ignore their pages, so they wouldn't even have to opt-out, but the following outcry "Google threatens to unlist us!!!!" was even louder than the former one "Google indexes our pages without paying compensation"

      This is NOT about indexing or being found by google news. Everybody wants to be indexed by Google!

      They simply want money!

      --
      bickerdyke
    3. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      TFA doesn't explain the situation... at all.

      Newspapers seem to think that Google wants their content to create services like Google News and enhance its search results, from which it derives profit. The problem is that Google's attitude is that web sites have to make their own money from visitors, which makes sense for search but Google News is essentially creating a kind of "digital newspaper" from other people's content.

      Because Google integrates news stories into its search results the line between the two is now blurred. Personally I think Google is right here, and while some profit sharing would be nice doing so would set a dangerous precedent.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      I doubt that Google News copies whole news stories... Noone would have ever thought that that should be covered by fair use. The original draft for this law specifically mentioned headlines. and isolated sentences.

      --
      bickerdyke
    5. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

      Because publishing something to the Internet makes it public by default.

      If you don't want your information to be public, you hide it behind passwords and login forms. Once its public, there's no reason to stop people from indexing.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    6. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Google might pull the entire text of news stories for indexing purposes, but they don't show it. If I'm searching for articles on a topic and enter my search term, Google News will show me links to the news articles in question with the title and perhaps some contextual text (the sentence surrounding it). They don't give me the entire article. If I want that, I need to click on over to the website to read it.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    7. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Except its complete BS. I use Google News all the time -- and I click through on the articles that are interesting to me. What it means is that I may not read all my morning's news on any one news site, which is annoying to them, but too bad.

      Also, it means all those news stories they pay for from AP and other news aggregators are worthless because I'm not going to read the exact same story from two different newspapers, but I might read the same story multiple times if they have different writers and angles.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    8. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      The problem is that Google's attitude is that web sites have to make their own money from visitors

      And Google offers a ton of various ad subsidiaries for that exact purpose, from AdMob for mobile, DoubleClick for your popover/popunder/flash ad needs, and probalby dozens of other ad networks they also own.

      Google is your friend - just subscribe to one of Google's many ad companies and you'll get paid.

      Seems like it's working fine for me.

    9. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by lightknight · · Score: 0

      Fairly certain Google is opt-in. I know I had to submit my website before it was indexed...

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    10. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Because the world wide web cannot operate as an opt-in service, and opting-out is not something you have to register with the operators. IE, a website owner doesn't have to go to some page on Google, Bing, Altavista, Wolfram, Yahoo, and whatever to opt out, a setting which would be conveniently 'forgotten' when those sites revised their ToSes, or terminated your account because you didn't log in, or anything along those lines. Those sites instead, are asking you what your preferences are, each time. You are the one who controls how long that setting lasts.

      I'm fine with opt-out if it's something I have control of setting myself.

      For many of these opt-out situations, the average user of the service doesn't have the education to even know the option exists, or know what will be done with information gathered if they don't opt-out. That's not the case with a website operator, you have to know that Google indexes your web server, and that you can stop that if you wish. If you don't want Google to index the site and don't use robots.txt, then I don't have any pity at that point. I don't feel the same about consumer-level services.

    11. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are many webservers which are not part of the World Wide Web.

    12. Re:Opt-in vs Opt-out by damiangerous · · Score: 1

      You only need to submit it if no one else on the web links to you. Otherwise Google will find it eventually when it crawls. Submitting your site to Google just makes them aware of it faster and gets your site showing up faster.

  21. stop all links to Germany... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google should stop linking to any German sites for a few days to see what happens....

    1. Re:stop all links to Germany... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People would switch to Bing?

  22. If only we could do that automated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They can ask Google to not index them.

    If only we had some way of doing that automatically per site?
    I propose a file named "robots.txt" file to be placed in a http server's root,
    in which is some parsable description that describes what web crawlers are and aren't allowed to access.

    It's not like we have anything like this right now... right?

    1. Re:If only we could do that automated by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Stop that, you're going to make me spill my morning coffee.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    2. Re:If only we could do that automated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their point isn't that they want to be de-listed; it's that they want MONEY. For the status quo.

    3. Re:If only we could do that automated by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      How in the world is that going to compensate them for the lost sales of their print version?

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    4. Re:If only we could do that automated by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      A law isn't required for that. They could check the referer and if it's google, show something like "sorry, Google doesn't pay us, so you can't see this article". Then they go to Google and demand money. Google will laugh them out the door, but Google would do the same thing if the law was passed: de-list the news site and forget about them.

      There's an existing technical solution, no need for a legal one. If these sites want to block clicks that don't include payment they can.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    5. Re:If only we could do that automated by Meski · · Score: 1

      You are mistaking the greater majority of /. readers for people who care about compensating dead-tree media owners.

  23. Tumbleweeds'll blow at one of the two sites anyway by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    This is a non-issue.

    "Fair enough. We won't link to these sites."

    Next government idiocy to deal with?

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  24. Ich Bin Ein Ber*loser* by outsider007 · · Score: 1

    That's all I have to say.

    --
    If you mod me down the terrorists will have won
  25. Sounds like a plan! by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    Google needs to delist ALL German websites Let's see the German internet economy collapse overnight.

    I'm thinking that their government is made up of idiots and morons that have no clue how anything really works.

    Although we do have a senator that thinks women secrete something when they get raped to prevent pregnancy, so we have our share of complete idiots as well.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Sounds like a plan! by divisionbyzero · · Score: 1

      Google needs to delist ALL German websites Let's see the German internet economy collapse overnight.

      I'm thinking that their government is made up of idiots and morons that have no clue how anything really works.

      Although we do have a senator that thinks women secrete something when they get raped to prevent pregnancy, so we have our share of complete idiots as well.

      It'd be a good opportunity for another search engine provider to step in and fill the gap but it's not clear that the business model works when the search engine has to pay to display a link.

    2. Re:Sounds like a plan! by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Although we do have a senator that thinks women secrete something when they get raped to prevent pregnancy...

      He's from the future. In 2250AD women have been genetically engineered to do exactly that.

    3. Re:Sounds like a plan! by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      Although we do have a senator that thinks women secrete something when they get raped to prevent pregnancy, so we have our share of complete idiots as well.

      He's only a congressman. I'm sure they'd never let anyone that batshit crazy be a senator, right?

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    4. Re:Sounds like a plan! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      He's from the future. In 2250AD women have been genetically engineered to do exactly that.

      Makes sense, since by 2213 soldiers will be retroengineered to rape everything that moves in order to breed the enemy out.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:Sounds like a plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't help but think of a certain 43rd president.

  26. Does this parallel "selling music by the track"? by drstevep · · Score: 1

    The news purveyors are complaiining that a summary of the article is being presented. People only read the summary and don't click to see the whole article. Ad revenue due to the news purveyor is lost.

    This seems similar to the original arguments against selling music by the track instead of the entire CD. The "old model" was that the purchase package was a full CD (with a few good songs and a lot of dogs). This parallels showing a whole page (with a few interesting paragraphs and a lot of filler. The content owners wanted to sell the whole package, not just the highlights.

    The new model is letting the listener hear a short clip (the paragraph on the aggregator's page), and then buying an entire song (viewing the whole article on the host page) if interested. Selling a whole CD (buying the magazine/newspaper or hopping to linked articles at the host's site) may be done if there's sufficient "good" content. And once on the host site, the viewer may well view more than the one article.

    This seems to work well for the music industry. Yes, the model has changed. Yes, they have adapted. The print world needs to examine this model, use it, adapt.

  27. backward by amoeba1911 · · Score: 1

    Everyone tries really really hard to be #1 to be linked by Google and other sites, these guys are ass-backward if they think people should actually pay THEM to put what's essentially free ads on their page. If I were Google, I would completely remove all links the sites that don't want to be linked, and let them die in the abyssal depths of Internet oblivion where nobody knows they exist. What a bunch of retards.

  28. Still more that Google can do... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    That doesn't necessarily stop Google. They could still list the sites as required by the courts, just give them a weight of .00000001, meaning they're on the last page(except for very specific searches), and only listed as a link, no text, so very few people would click on them anyways.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:Still more that Google can do... by bickerdyke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Courts aren't stupid... They would still recognize that as an equally unfair action against competitors.

      --
      bickerdyke
    2. Re:Still more that Google can do... by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Someone has to be listed at the top, someone else has to be listed at the bottom.

      Forcing a top result to the bottom might be unfair, but they are complaining that they don't want their results shown for free.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    3. Re:Still more that Google can do... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Actually, Google could do what they asked and just give a bare link back to the site in the listing. That is, the site appears in the search listing as www.deutschebag.com with no more information.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    4. Re:Still more that Google can do... by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      How are the news sites a competitor of Google's? Google is still primarily a search engine company, and the news sites are providing some nominal level of journalism. If Google just dropped every news site, it could be argued that they're engaging in abusive rent-seeking monopolistic behavior, but it's not like Google is abusing their monopoly to promote their own news services.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    5. Re:Still more that Google can do... by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      well, most newspapers sites aren't much more than aggregators for news agency material, too... And both are competing for readers. but as I said, that's a wide definition of competitor. more of a worst case scenario that might happen in court.

      --
      bickerdyke
    6. Re:Still more that Google can do... by sabri · · Score: 1

      Courts aren't stupid... They would still recognize that as an equally unfair action against competitors.

      I disagree with you here. Courts are stupid, at least most of them. If you look at courts around the world, you will see that most senior judges (the ones handling the appeals cases, which are the most important ones) are well over their 40s, and have no affinity whatsoever with technology, let alone the complex internal workings of The Big Evil Internet.

      Want proof? Look at the various rulings that prohibit linking for example.

      Not to mention the hostility they hold towards internet providers, favoring the Copyright Mafia.

      --
      I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
    7. Re:Still more that Google can do... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that is already possible by the content-owner...

      The newspapers just want to be fully listed, and if google index them they want money from google to pay for the links...

      Option 1:
      Google does not want to pay.. Google delists them completly.. Google is sued by the newspaper..
      Option 2:
      Google does not want to pay.. Google has to on their side block all content from the newspaper... Google is sued by the newspaper..
      Option 3:
      Google does not want to pay... Newspaper adds the standard robots.txt file to limit what should be indexed... The newspaper is not shown as much on google.. Newspaper loses visitors...
      Option 4:
      Google does not want to pay.. Newspaper still gets lots of visitors from google and just ignores this whole deal...

      Why should google be forced to pay for linking.. Google is a search-engine to find stuff.. If someone does not want to be indexed by google or any other search-engine they should use the standardized robots.txt file and if not there they allow indexing....

    8. Re:Still more that Google can do... by redlemming · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure that the issue is that most courts are stupid. Doubtless some of them are: there will be stupid people in any class, profession, or way of life. The problem with bad decisions is more likely to be related to the ethics concept known as "conflict of interest".

      Legal professionals write, defend, prosecute, and judge most of the laws in any given legal system. The ones working as judges also get to create or apply precedents or create court orders in a manner that can, in practice, substantially alter the written laws either in whole or in part. As a result, legal systems tend to get complex, confusing, even contradictory with the passage of time.

      Citizens that can't understand their legal system will necessarily need to hire a legal professional sooner or later, so this state of affairs can be highly beneficial to legal professionals. In some legal systems, this situation has gotten so bad that even legal professionals must specialize, which means that no ordinary citizen can hope to understand the legal system, a disastrous state of affairs for the society in which this occurs.

      Hence, legal professionals have massive ethical conflicts of interest with respect to the nature and form of the laws, with respect to the orders that courts issue, with respect to the decisions that judges make, and so on.

      Bad decisions, especially decisions that make the legal system complex or contradictory, or violate some sort of fundamental right, or allow the legal system to interfere with conduct that a rational society would consider reasonable, are a natural consequence of this ethical conflict of interest.

      Given that natural language is ambiguous, and artificial languages are too hard to use for most situations, there will always be a few problems with ANY legal system human beings can create. Or, putting this in other words, we can never achieve perfection.

      Some legal systems have far more than just a few problems away from perfection: instead they are riddled with bad laws, precedents, practices, procedures, bureaucracy, executive and court orders, etc ... and lots of bad judicial decisions will necessarily follow from this state of affairs. That situation is avoidable for a society, but it does require considerable effort on the part of society.

      In a sense, legal systems tend to develop entropy (i.e. chaos) over time, and only the application of energy from outside the system can reverse this. As more and more problems accumulate in a given legal system, the problems can develop a form of inertia and be very hard to reverse, especially as many of the people who have been involved in the system for a long time will have a big stake in the continuance of that system.

      When bad decisions occur, it's usually not stupidity we're seeing, rather what we're more likely to be observing is the inability of the parties involved to understand and act according to the ethical requirements of their jobs.

  29. The Summary is Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is about sites that "assemble" own sites with the content of others.

    For example, you have Sites A, B, C, D and then google pulls news from their sites and assembles it into google news, this law wants to make them pay for that.
    They show someone else's content as their own and make ad-cash from it without paying the others.

    If I do it, it's known as copyright infringement. The law wants to make that google (the assembler-site) has to pay for doing this. And, for once, I agree here.

  30. Welp... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Time for me to come up with a website, call it German FUD, and link to every news story published inside Germany and tell them to go fuck themselves.

  31. We want to eat our cake and have it by devent · · Score: 2

    That is so typical of content-"producers" or copyright-holders of the "We want to eat our cake and have it, too" syndrome. They want the extra traffic generated from the news-aggrigators and search engines, but what also a share of the money the news-aggrigators and search engines are generating by offering an useful service.

    If they do not want that the news-aggrigators and search engines are using their content, they could just use the robot.txt file to opt-out of the indexing. But of course then they do not get the extra traffic. So they choose the next "logical" step: get the benefit from the news-aggrigators and search engines but complain loudly and weeping so they get an extra piece from the money.

    The inter-trade organizations VDZ and BDZV could also just exclude Google or any other news-aggrigators they don't like and either a) create their own search engine/news-aggrigators or negotiate an agreement with Google.

    But of course weeping and crying is not only more easily, but with a new law they can extend their rights indefinitely. Right now the discussion is about the Topics and automatically extracted excerpts that should be protected for one year. In 5 years they will push the law for a protection of 5 years, and sooner or later it will be "aligned" with German copyright law and Topics and automatically extracted excerpts are protected for 70 years.

    from http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/Google-Leistungsschutzrecht-beispielloser-Eingriff-ins-Netz-1671227.html

    "Presseverlage im Online-Bereich mit anderen Werkmittlern gleichzustellen" und fordern die Bundesregierung auf, nicht "halbherzig" zu handeln.

    Meaning that they want the same copyright protection for topics and excerpts that they have for the article itself, meaning 70 years after the death of the author.

    --
    http://www.mueller-public.de - My site http://www.anr-institute.com/ - Advanced Natural Research Institute
  32. Nuts, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Able wants folks to know he is a relevant news source so he
    posts some news in public on a street corner and Baker sees it.
          Baker gets a cup of coffee for telling Charlie where to find it.
                Charlie goes to the street corner and reads it.
                        Able now wants a sip of Baker's coffee.
              Also, if Charlie makes money from what he read, then Able wants a percentage.

    Seems like Able wants to both have and eat his cake.
          He wants to post the news to advertize,
              but wants to get paid if someone makes money from reading it where he posted it.
    If he wanted to get paid, he should not have posted the news in public?

    This isn't a question of copyright, because neither Baker or Charlie copied the news they only read it on a street corner and used it.
          (Unless you want to eliminate the right to use what you have read,
                but then nobody would ever want to read any published work for fear that they would never again be able to do anything that happened to be writeen in the work.)

    It might be a question of breaking and entering a private place.
          If Able loaned Baker a private key for the first reading and Baker make a copy of the key,
              then if Baker gave Charlie a key so he could read it as well,
                  then maybe Able has a case against Charlie and Baker.
    (If you give the 'private' key to anybody, then I'm not sure there is an expectation of privacy.)

    Perhaps the question is what's a public place.
          If it's inside a locked building it's for sure not public.
          If it's in public view in a public place, it's for sure public.
          In between, I'm not sure.

    What's the equlivalent of a 'lock', 'public view' and 'public place' for the web?
        If spiders are permitted, it feels unlocked and public.
            (The paper can't publically ask Google to birng folks to their site but then claim it's private.)
          If the paper requires no login, and browsing gives you a simple URL, it feels unlocked and public.
              (If the paper doesn't care when someone comes normally to the site, they can't start caring when he tells his friend.)
          If a login is required and it gives you a one-time page view key as a URL, then it feels locked and not public.
              (If the paper did this with a secure key, then Google shouldn't be able to link to the site.
                    On the other hand, there is no requirement to use a 'good' lock to keep your property private.
                          A closed door should be sufficient to keep folks honest.)

  33. Yeah, that will work well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    News sites: "Pay up."
    Google: "No."
    News sites: *Die off due to lack of traffic because they're not listed*
    General Public: "And nothing of value was lost."

  34. Google can't be demanded that way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google may be forced to pay for displaying links but cannot be made to display links AND to pay for them.

  35. New business model emerging by radiumsoup · · Score: 1

    I think I just discovered a new business model (if the German plan goes through, anyway): Make content (or buy it from someone else, like the AP or Reuters), get it indexed by Google for several years, then "suddenly realize" that Google is indexing your pages in a way that generates income via pageviews/ads, then sue Google for back-royalties for all the years they "unfairly" linked to said content. Brilliant, if I do say so myself.

  36. That's actually hillarious. by GigaBurglar · · Score: 1

    That's a bit like an advertising agency paying for the privilege to advertise a company's service. You would have to be almost completely mentally retarded to suggest such legislation - but of course we are talking about politicians here; politicians and technology. Oh well. I guess there are plenty of other sites Google can choose to index for free. Good luck trying to get traffic.

  37. Google's Plan by PPH · · Score: 2
    1. 1) De-list all web sites requesting payment.
    2. 2) Wait until their traffic dries up.
    3. 3) Web site owners request being re-listed.
    4. 4) Google presents them with their price list:
      1. 4a) $0 if we found you and listed you for free initially
      2. 4b) ${big_bucks} to re-list plus:
        1. 4b.1) An annual % based on click through traffic.

    5. 5) ?????
    6. 6) Profit!
    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  38. robots.txt by WaffleMonster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Any news site not wanting a search engine linking to them need no legislation. All they need to do is create a file called robots.txt in the root folder of their site with the following content:

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /

    This will ensure said news site is never seen by anyone. The choice is yours and under your full control.

  39. That's Totally Fucking Ridiculous! by grcumb · · Score: 1

    ... news outlets are not averse to having a ridiculously inflammatory headline that has little or no relation to the article within....

    I couldn't agree more!

    --
    Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
  40. Douche? No, "doytch". by tepples · · Score: 1

    That is, the site appears in the search listing as www.deutschebag.com with no more information.

    I thought Zazzle sold Deutsche bags.

  41. I hope... by miltonw · · Score: 1

    If something like this becomes law in Germany, i really, really hope that Google doesn't cave on this one. It seems like Google has caved on stuff lately. If Google caves and pays, the floodgates would open and every country in the world would start demanding fees from Google for this and that.

  42. rss protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    rss has always been freely available

  43. IP laws are slavery by trout007 · · Score: 1

    IP is going away. This is just the death throes. IP is a way to control your personal property. For everything content based it means that someone prevents you from having 0's and 1's in specific sequences on a computer you own.

    --
    I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
  44. Re:I'm confused by V+for+Vendetta · · Score: 1

    This story is about the German government, right? That's in Europe, isn't it? I thought everything in Europe was peaches and cream and enlightenment, and stuff we defined as "bad" only happened in the backwards old United States.

    Yeah, but don't you remember that France and Germany are part of Old Europe? In terms of badness, that's right besides Sweden (remember? home of those ebil file-sharing pirates) and only slightly above North Korea and Cuba, I guess.

  45. Worst. Translation. Ever. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'Leistungsschutzrecht' (neighboring right)

  46. Google could go dickmode. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It probably doesn't speak well of me, but I would just internally replace the word 'German' with 'NAZI' for all search results for a while, or return "No reference to 'Germany' found" for any relevant search. Captcha's originating from German government controlled ip's would all be "Sieg Heil!". Oh the lulz.

  47. And they aren't accessible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But if you put your stuff on the WWW without some block to the content, you are allowing it to move.

    If you had to get permission by default, then you could not get any content over the internet because each router and switch between your content and the person you're trying to get access to will be unable to ask for permission.

    REMEMBER: they have to ask YOU for permission not only to make a copy, but to DISTRIBUTE it too.