"Deep Linking" Controversy Renewed in Texas 439
DaDigz writes "Wired News is reporting on a cease and desist letter sent to an independant news site by Belo, corporate parent of The Dallas Morning News, forbidding them from linking to individual stories within the site. They claim that the author can only link to the site's homepage, and attempting to link to stories within the site violates their copyright."
Next week Time Magazine will require you to read pages 1-36 before reading the article
you want on page 37. Don't complain, it's their copyright ;)
email to a friend (Score:4, Interesting)
Their copyright? (Score:5, Insightful)
In other news, footnotes in term papers and publications are now illegal according to these idiots in Texas. hehe.
Re:Their copyright? (Score:2)
The case here is more like if you xeroxed page 37 and posted it on telephone poles all over town with your business's phone number on it.
Re:Their copyright? (Score:2)
Re:Their copyright? (Score:4, Insightful)
The website never copied the article to its own servers. that is key in this case.
you are only directing someone to a news article
Re:Rights of redistribution [ NOT REDISTRIBUTION ] (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Rights of redistribution (Score:2)
I'll defend to the death, the rights of a content creator, to control how s/he chooses to redistribute their content.
I'll second that [except for the death part:)]
Realistically, though, I don't know what the big deal is here.
It seems to me that the newspaper in question merely needs to have a little more talent to fix the "problem" from a technical perspective. Just make up temporary fast-rotting links for news stories.
It's their right to do whatever they please with their content and how they organize it.
Likewise, it's my right to dislike a site that redirects me through 3 pages of advertising before I get to what I wanted to see or redirects a stale link into the front page.
Like other web site authors, I'll learn not to link into their news site and therebyybannoy my readers, thereby depriving them of the audience share they would otherwise gain from my link into their site.
If they and their advertisers are cool with that loss of audience, that's their perogative.
Personally, I'd settle for any audience I could get. Fact is, the ads will be exposed to a greater number of people than if they adopt a policy of fascistly redirecting deep links into AnnoyanceLand.
I agree with you. (Score:2)
Re:Rights of redistribution (Score:2)
That's really nice of you, but you're off-topic because no one is redistributing anyone else's content.
Barking Dogs is just linking to articles at the Dallas Morning News. The DMN is still distributing their own content, serving the pages from their own server.
Re:Rights of redistribution (Score:2)
IMO the distribution part is putting it up on the net. Plain and simple. You still have copyright. You still control who copies and redistributes it. No one can post it on their web site. However if they link to you it's still you redistributing it from your web server.
This is all up to interpretation and opinion, of course, but that's how I see it anyway. As a content creator I don't have any problem with that.
This case isn't about copying and redistributing IMO. It's saying that "If you want to read my book entitled 'foo' you must first read 'bar'. If you don't that's copyright violation".
Well bullshit. It's not. Just as it's not copyright violation to not read the front page of a site before reading an article contained within.
And what's wrong with someone saying "For more information refer to page xx in the book foo by bar etc...."? It happens all the time, it's perfectly legal and I see hyperlinking as the exact same concept.
And please don't bring up advertising and how I don't pay them and so I owe it to them to watch the ads. IMO that's the same as flipping channels on the t.v during commercials. I don't pay the individual networks and I still don't watch the ads. There's nothing illegal about that. Of course companies would like there to be but I think if that were to happen then maybe (just maybe) the public would realize that they're living in a police state after all.
--
Garett
Internet is Illegal (Score:2, Insightful)
Nobody said that (Score:2)
As the creators of the content, they should have the right to control how and when that content is made available. And to whom.
Re:Nobody said that (Score:5, Insightful)
Or by posting... (Score:2)
Restrictions which they are currently trying to enforce.
Do I think they are misguided, for putting restrictions like that on their content? Absolutely.
BUT... I absolutely belive that it is their right to put those restrictions in place as well. The content is theirs. Just because they made it available in some way to the public, doesn't take away their ownership of it.
More to the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Copyright does not enter here as no COPY is made. You are providing a signpost or link (driving directions, a page reference, nothing more) that tells someone where some content is. How you describe that content (if at all) is up to you, but you certainly are NOT redistributing it NOR are you COPYING it.
The visitor must actually visit the other site and the OWNER's web server distributes any information. Therefore how the heck could you be violating a COPYright? Can't can't can't!
I can see objections to mirroring. I _can't_ see this kind of BS attorney-drive goonery as it pertains to linking. There IS no COPY therfore no infringement of COPYright.
Think of another equivalent. I've built a house with murals on all the outside walls. You drive by... I've told you "Gee, the mural on the left wall is neat!" so you go look at it. You don't make a copy.... the only information is provided by the original source. But suddenly you're violating (or so is the bogus claim) copyright because you didn't look at the front wall first?
I think you need to understand what is actually occuring here and understand the actual nature of copyright law to understand why such tactics boil down to lawyer-aided thuggery.
Re:Nobody said that (Score:2)
Re:Nobody said that (Score:2)
Not what I said at all (Score:2)
As the creator of the work, I firmly believe that they have the right to control access to it, on whatever whim they have.
Re:Nobody said that (Score:3, Insightful)
They are using the wrong medium.
If you don't want an article to be "deep linked", don't put it in a web page! It's freakin' obvious.
Re: (Score:2)
Criminal Incompetence. (Score:5, Insightful)
A cease and desist letter should be considered criminal harrassment in this case, and the lawyer behind it should fear being disbarred for sending out such a letter. But there's no chance of that happenning.
Oh well, at least I'm not a US citizen, so it isn't MY taxpayer money that will go down the drain. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said about my legal rights.
Re:Criminal Incompetence. (Score:2)
Can I work where you work?
deep linking on slashdot (Score:3, Funny)
Fun with Analogies... (Score:2)
What does their copyright on news stories have to do with what page is linked anyway?
W
Technical Solution (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Technical Solution (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Technical Solution (Score:2)
http://ginworks.ath.cx/misc/dallasmornnews.txt [ginworks.com]
Re:Technical Solution (Score:2)
Re:Technical Solution (Score:5, Informative)
You could use an expiring url. That is, encrypt an expiration timestamp into the url. Now, your main page could have links which work, for an hour, into stories in your site. But if you bookmarked those links and use them after they expire, then those expired links simply give you back the main page again. Suppose you use 3DES to encrypt the expiration timestamp, you just keep the key private. Since only your server knows the key, only you can decrypt it. Or use other crypto.
Another possibility is through the use of sessions. Some web systems keep track of you by a "session", such as a shopping site might need to do. Within the session, links to stories within the site have the session id (or some function thereof) embedded into the url. Once the session has expired, or the user has logged out of the site, or even closes their browser window, the old links no longer would work.
Other techniques could be used with varying degrees of success. Instead of sending a <a href="story382728.html"> tag, send some javascript which is heaviliy obfuscated, but which eventually writes into the document the actual link. All kinds of code obfuscation techniques could be used, including implementing a small code interpreter with the actual code to write the url written in the interpreted code, with a layer of crypto thrown in just to make analysis of the interpreted bytecode more difficult. (The crypto decode key must be part of what is downloaded, so this doesn't defeat analysys, just complicates it.)
Other techniques include a challenge/response system implemented in Javascript. If they're on your main page, then clicking on the link to the story, creates a hidden layer (or frame) and sends a tiny <form> to the server with variables requesting a challenge. The script on the server generates some challenge code. The javascript computes a response and encodes the response into the url link to the story. Now the difficulty here is that you must hit some other magic url via. a form with hidden variables and a POST request in order to obtain the challenge code, before you compute a response to it to include into the url. The story links could expire fairly quickly so that the Javascript code has only 60 seconds to compute and hit the url with the correct response code before it expires. This makes it very difficult to try to even hit the story using netcat connected to port 80 of the server. Again, you would have to analyze the javascript code.
I'm sure I could think of other techniques if I thought about it longer than it took to write this message.
Re:Technical Solution (Score:5, Insightful)
This technique is to be considered as highly antisocial, as it not only forbids deep linking, but also forces the user to enable javascript. Many users have disabled javascript for security reasons (obnoxious popus, cross-site scripting, etc.), while others may use a browser that does not support javascript, either by choice, or by necessity (blind users surfing with a braille line must use a text-only browser). Moreover, if you push javascript too much, it may well only run correctly in one single browser (the one you developped/tested it in), ruining all portability of Html (and if you don't push it overly, then it will not be obfuscated enough to truely hide the URL). By using such techniques, you'll be perceived as a moron who does this in order to force users to use Internet Explorer, rather than as somebody who wants to protect your deep links.
with a layer of crypto thrown in just to make analysis of the interpreted bytecode more difficult. (The crypto decode key must be part of what is downloaded, so this doesn't defeat analysys, just complicates it.)
Actually, such techniques can be defeated even without analysis: just run a sniffer and log the URL's that your browser tries to access. You'd be inconveniencing the legitimate user without really impeding a determined attacker.
You're earlyer suggestions (session ids or timestamps embedded in URLs) are much more user friendly.
Re:Technical Solution (Score:2)
Re:Technical Solution (Score:2)
I agree that it's dumb for anyone to try and enforce this legally, but if they try to do it technically, they're screwing themselves too.
The idiotic part of this is, when i click on a deep-link, i often end up going to the homepage and checking out other information as well. They're so not losing anything here. it's silliness... ah well.. long live free enterprise with all its ugly flaws i guess.
Re:many people filter referrers (Score:3, Insightful)
law passed, or precedent set. If they don't want people coming from
outside sources, they should block them, not go whining to the authorities.
Copyright should deal with *copying and distribution*, not access to freely
available information. Linking does not copy or distribute any of the
site's content, nor does it even circumvent an access control measure.
:wq
Re:many people filter referrers (Score:2)
obligitory (Score:4, Funny)
i think i just broke (c) law. aaaah!
Re:obligitory (Score:3, Informative)
You performed fair use, using a reasonable portion of their material for your own creative commentary. (Weak and misguided, but creative.)
What you did there didn't damage the DMN. Since you're not taking the place of their front page, you're not taking valuable clicks away from them. Quite the opposite.
--Blair
"IANAL, I don't even like looking at it."
Re:obligitory - me too (Score:3, Insightful)
Does this mean the end of google? (Score:4, Redundant)
Re:Does this mean the end of google? (Score:3, Informative)
Search engines are not spammers. If you tell them to go away, they're more than happy to oblige you.
-Restil
Re:Does this mean the end of google? (Score:2)
"Screw ya! We are not even going to link to your home page or any page that you have in your domain. In our eyes you do not exist. Since our search engine can not read your bogus copyright, we must for our protect yank all references to your pages."
Organizations like this that are trying to "protect" there pages, yet still generate revenue would have a change in tone real quick.
Honestly, Google has the weight right now to do this, with them being the engine of choice for both Yahoo and soon AOL.
The end of slashdot? (Score:2)
Never mind that - it could be the end of slashdot. I wonder when Taco will be getting his "cease and desist" order(s)!
New google results (Score:3, Insightful)
Chicago Tribune
New Scientist
CNN
Tech Industry Forum
Slashdot
Keep looking, you'll eventually find it
Damn idiots... (Score:3, Insightful)
No need to sue...
Maybe instead they should fire their webmaster for being clueless...
Its surprising (Score:2, Informative)
-Dracken
Re:Its surprising (Score:5, Insightful)
If I read a book backwards, I will have an exerience other than what the author intended. Have I infringed his copyright? No.
If I play a LP at 45 rpm instead of 33 1/3 rpm, I will have a different experience than what the publisher and recording artist intended. Have I infringed their copyright? No.
If I set fire to a piece of sheet music instead of placing it on my music stand, I will have a different experience of the work than if I had used it as the publisher intended. But have I infringed anyone's copyright? No.
If I read a website with a text-to-speech converter (assuming there's plaintext to read in the first place), I will have a different experience of the site than the publisher intended. Have I infringed his copyright? No.
I don't know what is wrong with these "intellectual property" people, but they are creating a new oxymoron, it seems to me. There is very little intellectualism discernable in intellectal property theory.
Re:Its surprising (Score:3, Insightful)
Furthermore, a link doesn't "grant a user access to a part of [your] website." You grant access to your website. If you don't want people to access it, take it down.
Uhho (Score:2)
IIS/ASP (Score:2)
copyright infringement??? (Score:2, Interesting)
I can't imagine how someone would claim it is copyright infrigement if the "infringer" never touches the content in the alleged infringing act.
As has been stated before, if you don't want someone to get your content unless they go through your site, don't serve it to them. But don't expect other people to implement this for you.
It is clearly the DallasNews.com's content (Score:2)
According to the Belo lawyer:
Excuse me? (1) I can easily understand that the content is on a different site, and (2) the deep link in question has a large advertising banner prominently displayed across the top of the page.IANAL, but it sure sounds like this lawyer doesn't have a legal leg to stand on.
Re:You're missing the point... (Score:2)
The technical term for that is barratry , and it is cause for major countersuit. I think they should countersue, asking for treble the amount the Dallas Daily News wants.
you don't make money when something is free.. (Score:2)
Comment from the newspaper:
One of the ongoing issues with Web content is that it's free, and how do you make money off that?
Well, you DON'T, it's FREE!!
Of course they might mean Free as in Freedom, but then why are they sending C&D letters?
Why not just make the procedure complicated? (Score:2)
There are technical solutions... (Score:2)
Can people still deep link? Well, with that method, I don't see it happening very easily. Let's say they did, though, so what? If somebody wants something bad enough, they'll obtain it. You're far better off appealing to their good nature. If you ask somebody politely to send them to the home page, they'll comply. If I linked to a site and got an email that read "Could you please direct them to our home page?", I'd likely comply, or at least work out a solution.
Anybody who cries foul when a website is being used the same way every other website in the world is used really doesn't belong on the net.
What about Google, Altavista, Lycos, etc... (Score:5, Insightful)
And what is a "Deep Link"? Aren't all the documents on a web server stored on a hard drive? Last time I checked, the surface of a hard drive has no depth that would differentiate the height from the bottom of one document from another. So I am lost of the Dallas News argument. As far as I am concerned about my web site, all pages on it are home pages. I don't care if you link to "index.html" or "/news/04-02-02/index.html". Just link. The Internet is about information and making a clear route to it.
Re:What about Google, Altavista, Lycos, etc... (Score:2)
Choose wisely.
--Blair
Re:What about Google, Altavista, Lycos, etc... (Score:2)
I encourage others to help me with this experiment.
Re:What about Google, Altavista, Lycos, etc... (Score:2)
Is there a difference... (Score:2, Insightful)
This [dallasnews.com]
and
This: http://www.dallasnews.com/sports/topstories/stori
As far as I can tell people only complain when you actually embed a hyperlink in the source, rather than just display it as plain text. A difference of 15 characters.
Perhaps we could simply argue that we are just writing down the address of the story, it's the damn user's browser that is turning it into a highly-illegal hyperlink!
Re:Is there a difference... (Score:2)
Quote from the article.... (Score:2, Interesting)
"ultimately that this is our content and we should have some control about where and in what way it is used. We'll see what happens in the law and in the courts to decide how to proceed."
--end
This is such crap. If you want to control your content then fine, do it. Placing a web page on a public web server is like placing a stack of flyers in a student union. Sure, it's your content, but you've given up direct control of who get's their hands on it. If you want to make sure that people only see content the way you want to then you'll have to try something else. Like making people login (aka NYT).
Seems to me like all these problems arise from the fact that people don't understand that a web server is by default public. Same with the internet in general, being the 'open' standard that it is.
Policies (Score:2, Interesting)
This might lead to something reminiscent of the coding wars between AOL and MS over the Instant Messenger client.
The point is: they are trying to establish their right to assert a _policy_. This is why you would go through legal channels. Once you have established that as a right, then you could implement measures to prevent deep linking. This way, circumventing those measures would already be established as unlawful.
Belo may have a point. (Score:2)
By replicating the service by which users may find articles in the website, the linker is copying the copyrighted table of contents information, and using it for profit.
Fair Use allows copying in small amounts in otherwise creative commentary, but if a website reorganizes the table of contents to most of the online newspaper just to keep people looking at their own banner ads, then it needs to pay for the privilege.
Which makes me wonder how long www.1stHeadlines.com [1stheadlines.com] will survive.
--Blair
Re:Belo may have a point. (Score:2)
A single link sounds like fair use to me. If you aren't framing the result or other trickery, how is the link to the article not fair use?
Re:Belo may have a point. (Score:2)
Once again, the obvious. (Score:3, Interesting)
-Restil
BarkingDogs' answer to BELO (Score:5, Informative)
Let me just state for the record (Score:2)
Time to find a new homepage (Score:2)
http://news.google.com/ [google.com]
Switching to:
Slashdot.org [slashdot.org]. Oh wait. Shit!
Guess I better find a new life
Belo and CueCat (Score:3, Interesting)
-Restil
Tim Berners-Lee (Score:5, Informative)
"The ability to refer to a document (or a person or any thing else) is in general a fundamental right of free speech to the same extent that speech is free. Making the reference with a hypertext link is more efficient but changes nothing else. . . . There is no reason to have to ask before making a link to another site."
--Tim Berners-Lee [w3.org]
How to quickly change Belo's position (Score:2)
Belo will quickly change their position to allow free linking to anyplace you like.
A Dumb Question (Score:2)
Why this isn't a "capabilities" issue instead of a legal issue is beyond me.
Frames (Score:2)
This was, I think, the case with some other deep-linking complainants (who didn't think of just fixing their pages instead). However, in the case of the Dallas News, this doesn't seem to be the problem. Possibly it's an unthinking copycat case. Really, I can't see what they're complaining about -- they gain a visitor, who will view their ads, possibly click on them, possibly browse the site further, which they wouldn't have gained otherwise.
Easy technical problem (Score:2)
BTW, technical solution is to use session tracking. The homepage sets up a flag in the user session which article pages can check for. If not found send the user to a landing page for incoming outside links.
Technical solutions (Score:2)
Other than that they should just get over it.
Re:Technical solutions (Score:2)
Links = Google rankings. DMN are morons. (Score:2)
Second, these guys are morons for standing in the way of what brings in more readers than anything else- a higher Google ranking. Google largely ranks pages by the number of links to them from other sites. If DMN makes a stink about deep linking, other webmasters won't link to them anymore- kiss of death. The web worked this way even before Google, but now it's more important than ever.
This is not just a matter of marketing style, salesmanship technique, or professional opinion- it's a strict, technical fact, that marketers and webmasters must heed. If I were in charge over there, I'd kick some sense into the jackass who made this decision- or fire him- quick!
The Link Controversy Page (Score:4, Funny)
Is this just a scam? (Score:3, Funny)
I refuse to believe that these yahoos both put their content on the net and then expect people to change the way they use the web while viewing their content! Especially since it is in their power to control access to their info while still making it available on the web.
We're supposed to believe that these people are so technically inept and unimaginative that:
They can't figure out how to do this with cookies, hidden data, dynamically changing links (bad idea since people would link to invalid url's), or referrer data? They also can't figure out that the net is inherently a public place unless they take measures to prevent that? They can't understand that a law won't change the way people not subject to the law operate? They can't understand that naive people will continue to deep link to their content until their lawyers contact them, endlessly?
Impossible. No functionally literate human is that stupid. Therefore, this must be a cpublicity stunt.
This is stupid (Score:2)
I hate it when clueless morons invoke the law to accomplish a purpose better served by one frigging line of code.
In Other News... (Score:5, Funny)
"By allowing TV viewers to go directly from Channel 2 to Channel 50, they are denying channels 3 through 49 of valuable 'click-through' advertising opportunities. This will not stand!"
icopyright (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder how they would treat thier example. By clicking above, you get a page that has a link to the original article. So, linking to icopyright is just one step removed, and (so far) free. I wonder if icopyright takes this linking-to seriously. By allowing linking to their site, they can generate revenue for themselves, but at the same time, they diminish the "protection" they offer to their customers,
Just another thought (Score:2, Informative)
I don't know about you guys, but when I followed the deep link to the news article, I still saw plenty of adds and when I went to kill the window, I still got a pop-up add for my trouble. I don't think they're being placed in a bad position with respect to their advertisers at all. If anything, they're in a bad position with relation to their readers.
Deep linking. Isn't that what Slashdot does? (Score:2, Funny)
But a "home page" has no special status... (Score:5, Insightful)
Hyperlinking between pages at ANY level is the essence of the Web.
Aren't there any W3C standards that still say this?
At Least Do It Properly (Score:3, Insightful)
It always strikes me as insane that this argument keeps getting trotted out. They're attempting to misuse a law that's not suited to their purpose when there's one that was so kindly gifted to them...
If it's really such an issue, check the HTTP_REFERRER. If it's not your site, bounce them back to the front page. You can do it in a couple of lines and then you get to sue anyone who goes around it under the security circumvention clause of the DMCA. Great, now you can stop wasting everyone's time with nonsensical positions.
Actually, thinking about it, will someone go and patent that suggestion so the media conglomerates can't use it? I won't claim prior art if you use it sensibly.
Other Famous sites prohibitate too. (Score:2, Interesting)
230-Welcome to ftp.cdrom.com, a service of Digital River, Inc.
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Threat to the net (Score:2)
The entire internet is based around deep linking.
Imagine how much of a pain in the ass the net would be if NO ONE used deep linking, and ONLY linked to the home page. Worse yet, I have a road runner website: so can TimeWarner/AOL force people who want to link to my site to "link to the road runner homepage, and give instructions on how to get to my site"? That's nonsense.
So, you lame corporate spamming fucks, if you don't like deep linking, GET THE FUCK OFF THE NET! As if corporations have actually done anything useful for the net anyways.
Sorry if you don't like deep linking, but its a fact of the net. Putting up a website and then saying, "but no one can deep link" is like buying a car and then bitching about how crazy everyone drives. You don't like how other people drive? Get the fuck off the road, then, old man.
Deep linking is, simply put, a fact of the net; and a good fact. There are many other good facts of the net -- file sharing, freedom to express alternate ideas anonymously by creating accounts from public computers, etc -- but deep linking is one of the most important ones.
Not only does deep linking SAVE the netizen time and pain, but it also SAVES the netizen bandwidth because he doesn't have to download useless ads. But corporate netinazi's don't like that; they try to say that a netizen who uses a deep link or makes one is a neticrook. But really, these netinazi's should be happy, because deep linking saves THEM bandwidth too. Why should they want to use all the upload bandwidth to navigate a user through several layers of their site, when that user knows specifically where (s)he wants to go?
I argue to embrace and extend deep linking by creating a few scripts for your home page which allow users to view "stories" and "images" from other pages in a defined box on your page.
Make a script that goes to the desired link -- automatically logging in with your user ID (if necessary) so that your user doesn't have to log in -- and retrieving the desired text and images ONLY, and placing them, reformatted, in the box. This way, the person visiting your website doesn't have to get any unnecessary crap.
Re:Being on the web does not remove copy write. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, and the web is a hyperlinked medium. If they don't want their copy linked, they shouldn't use the web. A skywriter can't write a poem and sue anybody who looks up, and a mystery book author can't file charges because someone just skipped to the end to see who did it.
And it's copyright, not copy write.
--
Evan
Re:Being on the web does not remove copy write. (Score:3, Insightful)
One could argue that their beef with linking is analagous to me showing a friend an article from a paper I bought. I paid for it and got the article legally, but showing it to my friend precludes him buying the paper. They got screwed out of another sale, so should I be taken to court? The only difference is that they're not making any sale when I go to their site in the first place. Instead, they're getting ad revenue from me going to the site. When I refer my friend to the site, they're STILL making ad revenue, just maybe not quite as much. Overall, they've made more (relatively) by me sending the link to my friend than by me showing him an article.
It should also be noted that no one is REALLY going to wade through a news source's home page to find information. They have a plethora of articles and other publications. If I send an article to someone, it's probably because I think they'll find it of particular interest to them. They're not prone to say, "Gee, I wonder if Such-And-Such Times has an article on the population growth of Three-Toed Sloths." And yet again, they get more revenue simply because of a link, where someone wouldn't have otherwise gone and viewed an article.
-X
Re:Being on the web does not remove copy write. (Score:2)
100% agreed, If they had any brains, they would also just put their ads on the non-home page, as well as nice links to the rest of their site. I know when I get linked to an article or something it is not uncommon for me to use the links and check out the rest of their site. Most sites even go as far as providing links to similar stories on their site, etc.
What a bunch of buffoons.
Re:Being on the web does not remove copy write. (Score:2)
Kintanon
Re:Being on the web does not remove copy write. (Score:2)
Re:What's the problem? (Score:2)
Re:What's the problem? (Score:2)
Re:Technical problems ... (Score:2)
Re:Technical problems ... (Score:2)
(OT: Someone else posts substancially the same comment as I ten posts later and gets a +5 Insightful. <sigh>)
Re:Rewording required ... (Score:2)
Then why does Time put in a Table of Contents at the front of each issue? So you don't have to flip the bleedin 37 pages to find what you're looking for!
Re:Suck on this, Dallas News (Score:2)