Fri, 12 Oct 2007 10:21:08 by Kerry Dye
In my Inbox this morning popped a report
about how Associated Press is suing Moreover (owned by Verisign) for using content from their site.
Straight away on reading it I was reminded
of something that happened way back when here in the UK, when I first started working
full time on web projects in 1996. The Shetland Times sued the Shetland News
for linking to its news stories without permission. The nascent Internet held
its collective breath as the concept of linking to other sites threatened the
whole concept of websites, and especially search engines and news aggregator
sites.
Settled out of court, this was followed by
another threat the following year (1997), where news aggregator site News Index
received a legal notice from The Times
about using its content without consent. This too, endangered the whole concept
of linking on the Internet.
Obviously, ten years later, we know that
everything turned out OK, and the "old media" way of looking at things didn't
prevail and common sense won the day. However, this new case between two
Internet heavyweights again jeopardises the status quo, this time over threats
to Internet-based business models.
From an SEO point of view, this case is
interesting because of the high weight given in the search engines to the value
of links. Much as common sense prevailed then (why wouldn't you want someone sending you traffic?) in today's web
optimisation world people are extremely grateful for links, and indeed, there is a market in buying and selling links
so the concept of someone not wanting people to link to their content is
somehow ludicrous.
But, the web is constantly evolving and
changing, and the landscape transforms on a day to day basis, so we will have
to see what happens about this new blot on the horizon.
Kerry Dye Campaign Delivery Manager |