Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google The Media News

Belgian Newspapers Delisted On Google 385

D H NG writes "After being ordered by the Belgian courts to 'remove from its Google.be and Google.com sites, and in particular, cached links visible on Google Web and the Google News service, all articles, photographs and graphics of daily newspapers published in French and German by Belgian publishers,' Google had removed all traces of the newspapers in question from all its search services. The newspapers, however, are crying foul, and alleged that it was done in retaliation for being sued for copyright violations."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Belgian Newspapers Delisted On Google

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 16, 2011 @04:06AM (#36783712)

    What are you gonna do about it?

    (Google does support a noarchive robots extension tag, so instead of suing Google, you could have had just the search results without content by simply adjusting your server output.)

  • by Compaqt ( 1758360 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @04:07AM (#36783714) Homepage

    Help me out:

    1) "After being ordered by the Belgian courts to 'remove from its Google.be and Google.com sites, and in particular, cached links visible on Google Web and the Google News service, all articles, photographs and graphics of daily newspapers published in French and German by Belgian publishers,'

    2) Google had removed all traces of the newspapers in question from all its search services.

    #2 is the exact thing the court ordered in #1, right?

    So why, O, why, are the publishers whining in #3:

    3) The newspapers, however, are crying foul, and alleged that it was done in retaliation for being sued for copyright violations."

  • Uh, tough? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by _Shad0w_ ( 127912 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @04:07AM (#36783716)

    I think the correct response is "tough". Google have no obligation to include your site in their search results and if you start fucking around claiming copyright violation then the easiest way for Google to deal with it is to remove any trace of your sites entirely.

    Welcome to the unintended consequences of your actions. Next time think about what you're doing a little harder.

  • Money (Score:5, Insightful)

    by xkuehn ( 2202854 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @04:12AM (#36783734)

    If Google doesn't remove them from its searches, they demand money on the basis of ridiculous copyright claims.

    If Google does remove them, they demand money on the basis of Google abusing its monopoly to punish them.

    I know it doesn't make sense if you're sane, but that's how these sorts of people reason.

  • Re:Confused (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kjoonlee ( 226243 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @04:13AM (#36783736)

    I don't understand the logic behind the whining of these newspapers. First they sue Google for making their content discoverable. Then the court orders Google to remove the content. Google complies. Now the papers are whining about Google removing their content. What exactly is it that they want ?

    I think they want to have their cake and eat it too.

    They want to appear on Google web searches, but they don't want to be aggregated on Google News.

  • Re:Uh, tough? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Shadow of Eternity ( 795165 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @04:26AM (#36783794)

    I'm having a hard time calling this censorship. It's more like giving up on a tantrumming child who's WAY to picky about their food and just saying "Fine, he'll eat when he gets hungry."

  • by MimeticLie ( 1866406 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @04:30AM (#36783832)
    Actually, I think it did. From Chilling Effects: [chillingeffects.org]

    - Order the defendant to withdraw the articles, photographs and graphic representations of Belgian publishers of the French - and German-speaking daily press, represented by the plaintiff, from all their sites (Google News and "cache" Google or any other name within 10 days of the notification of the intervening order, under penalty of a daily fine of 1,000,000.- ? per day of delay;

    Emphasis mine. If Google isn't allowed to have any content from the newspapers on any of Google's sites and search engine indexing is based on content, then how is it supposed to index the pages?

  • Re:Uh, tough? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SerpentMage ( 13390 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @04:35AM (#36783860)

    No the problem and I can understand Google's perspective is that they were sued for doing linking. Google said fine you sued us, but now we have to remove you because we might get in trouble again.

    You may say its retaliation. I say its because of the software. Think about it. Google has this huge search engine that goes through the Internet. I am betting the news.google.com is a service that sits ontop of the search engine. So now Google has to remove the websites in question. They can do it one of two ways:

    1) Create a "don't use this content link" in news.google.com, which means changing their software.
    2) Add the websites in question to do not crawl thus removing them from everything.

    Remember that Google has a ton of services that work off the Google search engine. Does Google want to wait and get sued again because now instead of news.google.com its some other service that is doing the offending? I would just say it, bugger it remove them from the search engine. And of course a side benefit is that they get to release some steam.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 16, 2011 @05:22AM (#36784046)

    Err.... There is a million euro fine per day that Google would be fined if they kept something that they should not have done. If I was ordered to either pay that or remove it from ALL sites - they be gone in no time. Imagine standing up to the board to explain you lost another 5 million euros because the interpretation from the Judge was to include the links too and it took them five days for you before you could remove them.

    Remember, these are pissed of news papers - They could have solved these with robots.txt, but they rather sue, so you bet if they could incur more damages to google, they would not have passed the chance.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 16, 2011 @05:33AM (#36784088)

    All these companies and sites that get all pissy with google over stupid stuff...

    First thing google should do in any case of complaints or being sued is to strip ALL refrences to the offending site/company from their index.

    "We feel the only contact we should have with $org$ is thru our lawyers."

    As a google investor i like this idea.

  • by wvmarle ( 1070040 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @05:44AM (#36784118)

    Without Google websites have nothing.

    And that statement in itself shows the severity of the current situation on the Internet. And how much power is in the hands of a foreign, private, and fully unaccountable organisation.

  • by icebraining ( 1313345 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @05:55AM (#36784162) Homepage

    They can have the link, but without any content to match the searches, they'd never show up.

    Google followed the court order, nothing more.

  • by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @06:38AM (#36784302)

    a foreign, private, and fully unaccountable organisation.

    Man, you're fond of that phrase. It's at least the second post you've used it verbatim in. Let's have a look at it.

    "Foreign": Not to me, they're not. And everybody's foreign to somebody.

    "Private": Which means they don't have the right to extract money and obedience by force. Oooh, evil.

    "Unaccountable": On the contrary, they're very accountable--to the people who do searches. If they compromise their ability to serve up accurate, comprehensive and useful searches, people will go elsewhere. They're not accountable at all to the sites being searched, and a damn good thing, too.

  • by Weezul ( 52464 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @07:03AM (#36784428)

    I'm happy that Google takes the high road more often than not.

    In this case, Google has done exactly what the court ordered, well according to this English translation :

    Order the defendant to withdraw the articles, photographs and graphic representations of Belgian publishers of the French - and German-speaking daily press, represented by the plaintiff, from all their sites (Google News and "cache" Google or any other name within 10 days of the notification of the intervening order, under penalty of a daily fine of 1,000,000 per day of delay

    If the court had issued a more detailed order, like banning Google News only but granting Google web search a fair use exemption, then I'm sure Google would've followed that order instead.

    If the court had merely banned Google from displaying the pictures and text snippets, but explicitly permitted them to use the titles, then Google would likely still show the results in Google News, but ranked very lowly. Search results should obviously not be cluttered up by stupid links without summaries.

    I'd guess the paper's layer obtained this strong language thinking they'd negotiate some licensing deal with google. Yet first, google must obviously implement the literal court order as written. duh! Second, any licensing deal is unlikely to benefit the papers much because the papers depend more upon google than google depends upon them. Why should google buy their text snippets when other good Belgian papers give text snippets about the same subject matter for free?

  • by KDR_11k ( 778916 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @07:20AM (#36784482)

    Also Google News could only steal their readers if the newspapers actually had stories that couldn't be found on other publications. If they're just copy-pasting AP/AFP/whatever articles they're getting crushed on the internet either way.

  • by Weezul ( 52464 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @07:26AM (#36784522)

    Oops, there are two court orders here, one from yesterday and one from 2006.

    If the current court explicitly order covers Google Index, well that's the second time the papers pulled this stunt this stupidly, which is just give the French more ammo for their Belgian jokes (hint : the French always joke about Belgians being stupid).

    If the current court order only explicitly covers Google News, unlike the last court order, then Google is simply covering their ass by removing the content from Google Index too. Imho, that's the correct response until the courts have explicitly okayed some links.

    In the long run, Google Index obviously generates it's news results using Google News, meaning a news site not indexed by Google News will never make the Google Index front page anyways. So the papers will never see any traffic even after the court okays Google Index.

  • by Tridus ( 79566 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @08:10AM (#36784752) Homepage

    So why didn't they just have their web servers issue a 403 Forbidden when the Google news bot shows up? It's not like it's hard to detect, since it calls itself the Google news bot.

    Hey look at that, problem solved without lawyers and asshattery. I guess that made far too much sense for the MBAs.

  • Exactly (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Weezul ( 52464 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @08:18AM (#36784792)

    Any papers could exclude exactly the content they want excluded from exactly the google sites they want it excluded because Google's news indexer has a separate user agent [google.com].

    If they get an injunction however, then Google must obviously read the injunction as broadly as possible to avoid fines.

  • Re:Money (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RsG ( 809189 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @08:43AM (#36784980)

    You are aware of the concept of malicious compliance, I hope?

    The judge's order did not explicitly mention Google search, but did explicitly mention Google news and ambiguously mentioned "by any other name", which can be interpreted either way. So, there are a couple of other ways this could have gone.

    Google could have asked for clarification. Judges will do that if prompted. Contrary to what some of the armchair lawyers on slashdot will tell you, intent matters in law. If intent is unclear, it's universally understood that you ask first before proceeding. Clarification would have revealed no intent to delist the papers. Or Google could have used common sense to interpret the order narrowly to mean "delist the papers from Google news". It is obvious that they would not be fined for continuing to display search results. If the decision makers really felt the need to cover their asses, a simple phone call to their lawyers would tell them to ask the judge for clarification.

    Hence, I think it's obvious this is a case of malicious compliance. They deliberately choose the interpretation of an ambiguous court order that snubbed the newspapers. They will, along with some of the slashdot crowd, get around this by pretending the ambiguity wasn't there.

    Now, I know that some hotheaded idiot or Google apologist is already typing a furious reply to this post, so I'm going to preempt the inevitable: I'm siding with Google on this one. Yes, I think they were being dicks, but frankly if I were in their shoes I would have done the exact same thing. There'll be an clarification of the original court order shortly relisting the papers, but the message to the papers in question - "You need us more than we need you" - was much deserved.

  • by TapeCutter ( 624760 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @09:24AM (#36785194) Journal
    Robots.txt is not a solution to their problem. The problem they have is falling revenue, the solution they want is a slice of google pie.
  • Re:Money (Score:5, Insightful)

    by werewolf1031 ( 869837 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @09:28AM (#36785232)

    They will, along with some of the slashdot crowd, get around this by pretending the ambiguity wasn't there.

    Umm...

    Order the defendant to withdraw the articles, photographs and graphic representations of Belgian publishers of the French - and German-speaking daily press, represented by the plaintiff, from all their sites

    WHAT ambiguity? Where?! Sorry, but you're just making up any "ambiguity" out of thin air. The judge's order was pretty damned comprehensive and inclusive. There's nothing Google could have excluded without running afoul of the order as it was worded. They followed it to the letter, no more and no less. There is no room for interpretation with the phrasing "from all their sites", unless you expect Google to pull a Clinton and ask the judge to define the word "all".

  • Re:Money (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Zugok ( 17194 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @09:37AM (#36785318)

    Or Google could have used common sense to interpret the order narrowly to mean "delist the papers from Google news". It is obvious that they would not be fined for continuing to display search results.

    True, but Google faces a fine of 1 million euros each day that it does not comply (with 10 days' grace). At one million euros a day, I be taking a broad interpretation too.

  • Yeah, exactly (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Weezul ( 52464 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @11:53AM (#36786326)

    Copiepresse's lawyers won a strongly worded injunction on behalf of these three papers. Google is making sure they don't violate it.

    Ironically, the papers already had the ability to control how their content was displayed on google, through the nosnippets and nocache flags in metatags, google news' separate user agent id, etc. All they've achieved is : Now the papers must pay Copiepresse lawyers to make those changes slowly rather than paying their own technical people to make them quickly.

  • Re:Money (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 ) on Saturday July 16, 2011 @12:44PM (#36786738)

    Basically, it boils down to one thing:

    Lawyers are bullshit artists extraordinaire. And the law is their paintbrush. This is the same lot who can take a statement like: "shall make no law", which by all rational standards should amount to a very simple boolean, and come up with a meaning like: "should, in general, refrain from making laws unless they really feel like it".

    Obviously, it's no different in Belgium.

Always try to do things in chronological order; it's less confusing that way.

Working...