Canadian Newspaper Charging $150 License Fee To Publish Excerpts
dakohli writes "Michael Geist has pointed out an interesting development at the National Post's website. 'If you try to highlight the text to cut and paste it, you are presented with a pop-up request to purchase a license if you plan to post the article to a website, intranet or a blog. The fee would be $150.' He notes that even if you are highlighting a 3rd party quote inside an article a pop-up asking if you want a license will appear. Mr Geist points out this might be contrary to Canadian Copyright Law's fair use provisions."
We should embrace their spirit of experimentalism and their desire to try potential new revenue streams, and start charging money for posting as an A/C on slashdot.
The fee should start out as two cents, natch.
They have a computer. If you ask their computer nicely, it will send you some bits.
They're free to send me whatever bits they like in response to my request (so long as they don't materially misrepresent what they are, as in the case of malware etc.). In turn, I'm free to do whatever I like with the bits they send me. If I want to interpret them as instructions for rendering a webpage, as is conventional, I can do so. I can also print out the HTML and wipe my ass with it if I like.
If that webpage has some Javascript that says "Ooh, you highlighted some text, pay me please!" I am free to turn off Javascript and cut and paste that text, or render it in Lynx, or grep the HTML, or whatever the hell else I want.
If they didn't want me to have access to the text they sent me, they shouldn't have sent it to me.
Not only did NoScript completely defeat this system, but it actually revealed which company they hired to create it:
http://info.icopyright.com/
Palm trees and 8
Or you can add "license.icopyright.net/rights/" to your adblock filter list and never see the stupid overlay ever again.