Google News Removes Belgian Newspaper 381
CaVi writes "Following a judicial action (link in French) by the 'French-speaking Belgian Association of the press,' Google.be has removed all the French-speaking press sites from its index, as can be seen by doing a search. The court order to Google is posted at Chilling Effects.
In summary, the editors want a cut of the profit that Google News makes using their information. No such deal exists for the moment. Google has been ordered to remove all references, or pay one million Euros per day if it doesn't comply. Net effect: they removed all link to the sites, from Google News, but also from Google's search. Will Google become irrelevant in Belgian, and be replaced by MSN? Or will the newspapers, which gain from commercials, and thus net traffic, change their position when they'll see the drop in traffic that it is causing?" There's also a link to a Dutch news article on the subject; one of the key issues was evidently that some of what Google was carrying was no longer available on the newspaper's website itself, so rather then linking to the newspaper, Google was displaying it on their own.
Let's play BREAK THE INTERNET! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Let's play BREAK THE INTERNET! (Score:5, Interesting)
I always warn people I know who are vacationing in Europe -- avoid Belgium. Who knows what else they will try to persecute you for there.
Re:Let's play BREAK THE INTERNET! (Score:4, Funny)
Belgium is like Washington DC: too many bureaucrats for their own good.
Re:Let's play BREAK THE INTERNET! (Score:4, Insightful)
can't say I'm surprised. They have some strange legal notions in Belgium
Yeah, one stupid company and the whole country should be avoided. Expert advice, Wayne!
This is quite a sensible decision by the belgian court, I think. Several newspapers offer the news of today for free on their websites, and let you pay for searching the archives. Google caches those pages and offers them for free with their own ads added. Plain and simple copyright violation, no arguing around it. But quite convenient of course...
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First of all, Google News doesn't have ANY ads, mainly because of concerns over copyright that you mentioned. Secondly, Google Web Search only displays its ads in its search listings, NOT when you view the cached page. And most competent webmasters know that if they don't want their content cached by Google, they can just edit their robots.txt file to exclude themselves from being cached, or even indexed.
I just can't understand why new
Re:Let's play BREAK THE INTERNET! (Score:4, Funny)
Belgian laws don't affect us here in the US.
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Re:Let's play BREAK THE INTERNET! (Score:4, Informative)
I'm not sure about the rest of the world, but this has definitely happened in Chicago [boingboing.net]
Ah, Belgium (Score:3, Funny)
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100% of my income comes from (google) ads. ANY source of traffic is presious and those newspapers will feel the lack of that extra money. To me, all those stories about newspapers demanding money form G always sounded like extortion. Something like "if you won't give me half of your lunch, I will
Re:Ah, Belgium (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ah, Belgium (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Ah, Belgium (Score:5, Funny)
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> I don't know... looking on google, I don't find anything happening in Belgium.
In the event that you did not get the immediately preceding joke, you should consult the works of Urbain Servranckx and immediately consume at least two stiff drinks.
cc: EU dept of humor notifications.
Better than over inclusion of "News" Sites (Score:5, Insightful)
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Block IPs? (Score:5, Funny)
MOD PARENT UP (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Block IPs? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Block IPs? (Score:5, Insightful)
The newspaper's webmaster should just learn how to use the 'NOCACHE,NOARCHIVE' tag.
Bingo. If " one of the key issues was evidently that some of what Google was carrying was no longer available on the newspaper's website itself, so rather then linking to the newspaper, Google was displaying it on their own." is accuarate, they failed to avail themselves of the quick, easy, and cheap solution. Obviously, that's not what it really was about.
I don't understand why news outlets get so upset when sites like google point people to their content. They should think of it as free advertising.
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And a lot of people see it as exactly that, and are thankful for the traffic Google sends their way. I get about 140 referrals from Google a day, and am very welcoming to the Google spiders.
Nonetheless, this argument is very similar to the "Musicians should see Napster as an advertising medium to sell concert tickets" debate — some musicians do, while other
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Why should they be forced to do anything? Google should use its awesome psychic powahs to automatically determine that when they put out information for the whole world to read, they don't actually want the whole world to read it. Or remember that it ever existed once it's gone.
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Now, that's not a bad idea at all... don't know why it's modded Funny; If I had mod points, it would get modded Insightful.
Tit for tat... if we can't link to your articles, we won't give you links to help you write those articles.
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Google has done the very un-evilest thing they could in that situation. To attempt to further penalize those companies could (and probably would) be considered 'evil'.
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The newspaper is upset with Google because they link to their site without sharing in any of the profit the make through advertising; but google links to everyone's site without sharing any advertizing and if everyone reacted the same way these newspapers did it would become impossible to search the internet for anything.
Anyways
Like most people (I imagine) I rarely remember the address of sites I wish to visit and usually google for them; now that these papers
Don't worry its Belgium (Score:3, Informative)
As the old challenge goes, name 10 famous Belgians. Nice country and all but not exactly news central. In effect this is like Des Moines doing the same, and not even people in Des Moines would mind if they just had OTHER peoples news.
Maybe its the start of something, all really dull places will sue to have their very dull news removed. After all, if something interesting happens there then one of the majors will cover it.
$1m a day... nice sense of perspective.
Re:Don't worry its Belgium (Score:5, Insightful)
ice country and all but not exactly news central. In effect this is like Des Moines doing the same, and not even people in Des Moines would mind if they just had OTHER peoples news.
Hmm, you have a very different perspective than I. I've always viewed Belgium as one of those countries with disproportionate influence. As the location for the NATO headquarters, they've always been sort of representative of Europe, and now with the headquarters of the EU there as well, it is semi-official. I've always viewed it as sort of a hub, where influential Europeans meet to make decisions. But, I've never been there, so maybe my perspective is skewed.
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The original headquarters of NATO was Paris, but it was moved to Brussels after DeGaulle began to withdraw French forces from the NATO command structure to spite the US and UK. This is only a guess, b
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Erasmus, Descartes, Brueghel, Van Dyck, Georges Lemaître, Henry Spaack, Karel V, Mercator, Jacques Brel, Sax, Django Reinhardt, Jansenss (farmaceutica), Damiaan
I know, all from the past. I'm quite sure that 100 years from now lots of present Belgians will be known. Belgium is the European epicentre for science, politics and art.
Hey, it's not my fault you don't know any history.
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His cockney accent was pretty poor in Mark Poppins though.
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Descartes: If you are talking about Rene Descartes, he was French.
Van Dyck: Score, you 1, me 2.
Lemaitre: You tied the score...good job.
Spaak: I really should deduct points for you not knowing how to spell his name.
Mercator: Can I deduct you two here? Nicholas was born in France and did work across Europe including Netherlands, again not Belgium.
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Erasmus was Belgian but Belgium was part of the Netherlands back then, hence the misconception that he was born in the "southern netherlands".
Same deal with Descartes (and I'm talking about the cartographer). He was definatly Belgian, you can even visit the house he was born here.
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He is so famous in fact, everyone who read that first thought of Rene Descartes, who is arguably much more famous and very much not from Belgium.
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Amélie Nothomb
Hergé
Jacky Ickx
Charles the Great
Adolphe Sax
Lara Fabian
Jacques Brel
Raymond Devos
Cécile de France
Helmut Lotti
That's on top of my head (and no, I am not Belgian)
Just because you don't know any doesn't any doesn't mean they don't exist
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and i'm not exactly proud of Helmut Lotti
but you left out Django Reinhardt !
and Toots Tielemans
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Victor Horta
Eddy Merckx
Kim Clijsters
Justine Hénin
Jean-Claude Van Damme (if Lotti counts, he does too
Re:Don't worry its Belgium (Score:5, Funny)
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And of couse Home of Jacky Ickx, that guy is one of my great heroes...
And don't forget,,,, (Score:3, Funny)
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Here goes (in random order):
1) Dirk Frimout, 1st Belgian astronaut
2) Adolphe Sax, inventor of the saxophone
3) Justine Henin-Hardenne, tennis player, current no. 2 in the WTA Tour
4) Kim Clijsters, currently 4th ranked female tennis player in the world
5) Tom Boonen, 2005 world cycling champion
6) Paul Van Ostaijnen, influential Modernist poet
7) Doctor Evil, evil doctor
8) The Smurfs (all of them)
9) Tintin, reporter (French-speaking, so all
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- adolph sax
- toots tielemans
- django reinhardt
- jean claude van damme (hmmm... i know i know... you said 'famous' not 'great')
- anouck lepeire
- kim clijsters
- justine henin - ardenne
- audrey hepburn
- rene magritte (ceci n'est pas
- peter paul rubens
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Can I sue google for GPL violations? (Score:2, Insightful)
Using the same logic as described here, I could probably sue Google for some GPL violations.
Some web sites incorrectly send all their contents as text/plain or text/html, including binary files, images, etc. It looks like Google tries to automatically correct this, but is not always successful (this may depend on the amount of plain text contained in the binary file). Anyway, regardless of the reason why it happens, it seems to be possible to find a few binary files in the Google cache (not easy, but po
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"As can be seen by doing a search"? (Score:2)
Guess what? (Score:2, Interesting)
Syncerus
French? (Score:5, Funny)
Big loss? (Score:3, Insightful)
In reality, there is value to keeping articles around, and I really wish that newspapers would take the initiative and do a better job with that.
Regardless, this is unfortunate. Perhaps the companies should just keep the articles around... and then they could make all this "money that google is making from the articles" for themselves.
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Probably will be reversed (Score:2)
it's not this bad over here (Score:3, Funny)
oh wait..
Google is taking risks (Score:3, Insightful)
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If the Belgian newspapers had designed their site correctly by including the meta tags from the very beginning; there would have been no lawsuit. Since they didn't; Google is right to make them suffer by de-listing them entirely.
Stupid design is always a capital crime.
What about robots.txt? (Score:4, Insightful)
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The point is that copyright owners still have a right to exert control over their copyrights; whether or not they use a robots.txt file. Searching and displaying
Re:What about robots.txt? (Score:4, Insightful)
If they don't, as has happened, they stated "We do not want Google to index our pages without paying us lots of money, as google make money off the indexing and finding", and Google promptly took them out of the News and Search.
Now, they have exactly what they asked for. Google will make nothing from them.
However, as always happens, they didn't actually stop to think what this would REALLY mean. They called Google's bluff, expecting to make a lot of money from the deal. Google didn't bluff and said "Ok then, you're on your own".
Now, they're on their own, and will definitely lose the ongoing money obtained through the search engine hits Google provided to them (gratis, and subsidised only by their own index adverts on the way there. Everybody pays for PR after all).
Now, if things change to the point that all sites need to have something to opt in, on a per directory basis (otherwise you end up with a clash), or even per file (for the same reasons), the whole concept of indexing the web becomes impossible, or at least vastly more difficult. For example, you'd need to stamp a file that you wanted indexed using extensions to existing HTML, or in meta fields. And as a goodly many people who put pages up want them indexed, and use tools, then the tools will soon start having defaults of the 'index me' stamp. And then we're back to square one with more traffic being used uselessly.
So, you can either choose the opt out (and get free advertising into the bargain), and opt out where you wish, or choose a way that breaks the whole model for everyone.
The problem is Google Cache, I think (Score:5, Informative)
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In my experience, Google no longer caches websites that haven't been indexable in some time. That is to say, if you remove the page or even better -- replace it with an empty one that links to an excluded page, Google should (and most likely will) remove the cache of the originally indexed page. I'd expect this to happen within a month or so (from my experience).
No guarantees.
As with all things.... (Score:2, Insightful)
GASP!!! (Score:2, Informative)
In all seriousness, I didn't know the french-speaking press of the Belgian world was so damn stupid. Most of their traffic probably comes from people accidentally clicking on links from google. Why would they do this? Money?
That's like kidnapping D
chocolate (Score:2)
Belgium vs Google : some accurate info (Score:5, Informative)
What is this "Belgium"? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How important is French to the Belgians? (Score:5, Informative)
They speak Dutch (Flemish), French, and German.
I sometimes wonder about the average
Re:How important is French to the Belgians? (Score:4, Insightful)
If you would look at the submitter's text, and the fact that the submitter's URL is .be, it might occur to you that the submitter isn't a native Engish speaker, and figure he made a simple mistake. In fact, you might even surmise that the submitter is Belgian, and would therefore not be likely to be confused about what languages are spoken in Belgium.
Even if you're going to be a pedant, in the sentence "Will Google become irrelevant in Belgian, and be replaced by MSN?", 'Belgian' could just as easily be read as a mistaken use of the adjective form instead of the noun form, i.e. "Will Google become irrelevant in Belgium...".
And I sometimes wonder about the average /.er's grasp on basic logic and common decency.
-Esme
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I sometimes wonder about the average
Maybe because they are too busy grasping something else?
Re:How important is French to the Belgians? (Score:5, Funny)
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I hate to tell you this, but Belgium is not a major country. Do you happen to know what languages are commonly spoken in Zaire or Kenya? Or what the different ethnicities of the people in Chile are? What languages are commonly spoken in India (all of them, please)? What are the common languages spoken in Liechtenstein and Monaco? These questions are akin to asking what languages are common in Belgium.
If we were talking
Re:How important is French to the Belgians? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:How important is French to the Belgians? (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-1604253
KFG
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Re:How important is French to the Belgians? (Score:5, Informative)
Belgium is a country with three official languages and three main regions - the Flemish-speaking Flanders (6 million people), the French-speaking Wallonia (3.3 million people) and the mostly-French-speaking, officially-bilingual capital Brussels (1 million people). Plus to add to the fun, there are 70,000 German-speakers in the east of the country.
There are some pretty harsh rivalries between the currently-financially-stable Flanders and the recession-hit Wallonia - it's impressive that the country hasn't split apart already. The situation is
But then Belgium's really dull and nothing happens here, right? I know otherwise, because I live here.
Re:Can we get some editing here please? (Score:5, Informative)
They changed the way the articles were accessible and made a "pay to view"-service, yet google had cached the newsarticles offering them "for free" (as the previously were offered publicly for free)
The problem for them was in how Google had a cache of something that wasn't free anymore, violating their copyright.
The link to the article on vrtnieuws [vrtnieuws.net] as a Belgian newssite is misleading as vrtnieuws is a Flemish (Dutch speaking) newssite. In the audio fragment the interviewer wonders wherever it's not "good publicity" to have google link to your content and the specialist agrees with that how newssites "like" that, but explains the articles didn't link back to the website to the updated or removed content which posed the problem: their content being cached, freely accessable when they charged for it, and no link back to their webpage.
Re:Can we get some editing here please? (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm. Another conspiracy by the evil cartographers [uidaho.edu]? Did you know that more than 99% of all maps are made by cartographers? Definitely some sort of conspiracy going on here.
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Why only google.be, not google.com/.fr? (Score:5, Interesting)
It seems like the block has no practical effect, since you can find everything by going to google.com or
I don't know why they did this for
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And besides, payback is a bitch.
Re:Abusing monopoly (Score:4, Insightful)
This is not entirely clear, but it seems Google is abusing their near monopoly on search to strong arm their position in a new market of News.
The last numbers I saw placed Google as having about 45% of the search market. That isn't even in the running for being a monopoly.
Their have been ordered to remove other peoples news from their news service, and have decided to additional punish the source by also removing them from the search index.
As far as I can tell, there is no way in which this ruling applies to news.google.com that does not apply equally to google.com search. If one is ruled illegal by the courts, the other is probably just as illegal, so it makes sense to remove them from both.
I really thing Google should be allowed to link any news together in a news service, but escalating the issue to searching is really abusive and something I am quite sure they will be punished for in Europe. (Besides the obvious fact that it IS EVIL).
If Google had a monopoly, this could be an antitrust issue, but I've seen no evidence of that. There are a lot of players in the search market and Google has instituted absolutely no lock-in of any kind. Nothing stops Belgians from moving to something else, aside from the fact that the others tend to be lower quality. I don't foresee any antitrust action against them for this, nor any grounds for it. Since they don't wield monopoly influence in the market, I don't see how this is "evil."
RTF ruling (Score:5, Informative)
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The ruling specifically talks about google's "cache". This would include the search cache.
In other words, they probably have good legal advice to remove these sites from the search cache (not just news) because these companies would be able to sue them again with exactly the same complaint for having their content in the search index.
It would be a legal liability to
Re:Abusing monopoly (Score:4, Insightful)
escalating the issue to searching is really abusive
Why?
Google just got sued by these guys for indexing their site. When you lose a lawsuit with ignorant assholes (i.e. anyone running a business on the web who doesn't use robots.txt and then complains about being indexed), the safest thing to do is make completely sure there's nothing left by which they can leverage that lawsuit into something like a contempt complaint.
Of course, not being indexed by Google can apparently be the basis for a lawsuit, too. Damned if you do...
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Neither does Microsoft on operating system. Yet their market share is significant enough that they have to obey monopoly rules.
Antitrust law is built around whether or not a company wields monopoly influence on a market. Many of the laws use 70% as the point at which such an influence should be investigated. Windows has something like 90% of the desktop market, and there are significant barriers to entry. Their monopoly influence is easily demonstrated by pricing that does not follow the curve of a free
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So you believe Google indexing has some value to this newspaper, yet they paid exactly nothing to Google for this service. It seems to me they have absolutely no claim. If I'm receiving free electricity but complain to the power company about the power lines on my property, I can't very well complain if they cut me of
Freedom waffles? (Score:2, Funny)
I want some.
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I want some."
The diner a block from me makes them that way in the vague shape of the US flag.
I'm not kidding.
And yes, they _are_ yummy.
To make this on topic, Google directs viewers at the Belgian newspapers, and the Belgian newspapers are then able to extract yet more money from their advertisers. I think to make a point, the other search engines should also boycott Belgian newspapers, because no good can come of this if this sets a precedent.
T
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