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AP Battles Blogs

The Associated Press' attempt to control bloggers has resulted in a big (sort of) mea culpa.

 
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The Associated Press took a grandiose Facebook-style faceplant last week when it attempted to impose strict guidelines on the blogosphere.

Now, just like Facebook's initial unapologetic enthusiasm for its privacy-violating Beacon program followed by Facebook's effusive apology for its privacy-violating Beacon program, the AP is bowing to the will of the angry Internet masses and backing off. Sort of.

As part of the big mea culpa, the AP's Jim Kennedy pledged to meet this week with Robert Cox, president of the Media Bloggers Association (which is, you know, kind of like meeting with the United Organization of Anarchists), and work up some sort of AP/Blogger Accord.

So mark the date kids, this is yet another moment in Internet history we'll someday look back on in Wikipedia when we scratch our heads and try and figure out how cyber rights and responsibilities got to wherever this whole World Wide Web thing is going.

It all started with a letter from AP (a national news organization that pays the rent by selling news reports to other media, including msnbc.com) to the Drudge Retort (a news aggregator site named in parody for the muckraking site, Drudge Report). AP requested that the Drudge Retort remove seven posts featuring quotes from AP stories. From there, it blew up into yet another full-on Internet conflict between Big Business and the Little Guys.

To citizen journalists out in cyberspace, AP's proclamation against one little aggregate site (much smaller in comparison to, say, Digg, etc.) rang like a shot across the bow of fair use, especially after an AP spokesperson announced that, from here on out, the news agency would take action against blogs, "when we feel the use is more reproduction than reference, or when others are encouraged to cut and paste."

After some sort of emergency executive meeting, AP's Kennedy spoke to Saul Hansell of The New York Times. In what read like an effort to appease the enraged cyber mob, Kennedy admitted to the "heavy handed" verbiage in its Drudge Retort missive and assured all that better guidelines would likely result from The Big Blogging Meet-up this week.

(Meanwhile, according to The New York Times, the initial Drudge Retort cease and desist stands.)

It's probably safe to assume that, diplomacy aside, the AP still feels pretty good about instituting some sort of restrictions on said cutting and pasting. So we've got a few interesting things in play here. On the one hand, there's the sensible legal condition summed up by Hansell in the Times article: "One important legal test of whether an excerpt exceeds fair use is if it causes financial harm to the copyright owner."

That said, it's probably also safe to assume that thousands of newspaper and broadcast outlets won't someday soon stop paying their AP bill because everyone's getting AP excerpts for free from The Johnson Family Home Page Dot Net. But you know what happens when we ass-u-me. Because, on the other hand, we've got a bunch of lunk-headed blog readers who don't click links and do their own reading.

Note the emergence of "RTFA" (Short for Read The F- - king Article) as a standard abbreviation on Digg. As a whole lot of blog enthusiasts on Digg understand, a whole lot of other blog enthusiasts only read the headline, not the "expletive-deleted article" and then make a bunch of brain-dead comments that irritate the blog readers who do, in fact, read for comprehension. Flaming ensues.

 
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Member Comments
  • Posted By: loriw @ 06/22/2008 3:54:11 PM

    Comment: I do have to say that those bloggers that cut and paste the same post to every blog for every article are annoying. If you can't respond directly to the content of the article or to another post your just wasting the reader's time. One person reapeatedly and randomly posted a quote from HRC to one article. Fortunately, bloggers got her to quit. Be pertinent or be quiet. Report abusive language or clearly abusive material.
    That's why I prefer newseek's blogs because you can report abuse.

  • Posted By: thebillenator @ 06/19/2008 4:18:55 PM

    Comment: There are a couple of big issues at play.

    First this isn't just a 'Blogging" issue. It directly impacts all online communication.

    Second is "fair use" and in general the AP is looking like it is trying to force the online community into accepting draconian licensing that is arguably not required. This is especially bad since the AP routinely paraphrases, excerpts and lifts content for the news articles they publish.. Bloggers are publishing proof
    There are a couple of big issues at play.

    First this isn't just a 'Blogging" issue. It directly impacts all online communications.

    Second is "fair use" and in general the AP is looking like it is trying to force the online community into accepting draconian licensing that is arguably not required. This is especially bad since the AP liberally paraphrases, excerpts and lifts content for the news articles they publish from others.. including from the blogs, but also from other news papers and news entities.

    Third: What you don't mention is that AP has online forms that claim to pay for using more than four words of text.. So the AP has essentially set a defacto standard that to them fair use is four words of text. Using five or more will cost you $12.50 to $100. This is eyebrow raising and to be blunt, no company gets to set what is fair use.

    Fourth: Given the shown behaviour of AP using other's work they look like hypocrites. They need to abide by the exact same standards.. They're not special.

    No wonder people are mad...

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