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Newspaper, Magazine and Book Publishers Organizations to Address Search Engine Practices
Thanks to Teresa Hackett of eIFL for this item.
Paris, 31 January 2006
For immediate release
Newspaper, Magazine and Book Publishers Organizations to Address Search
Engine Practices
The newspaper, magazine and book publishing industries have come
together to explore ways to challenge the exploitation of content
by search engines without fair compensation to copyright owners.
A task force of global and European publishers organizations, led
by the World Association of Newspapers, has agreed to work
together to examine the options open to publishers to assert
their rights to recognition and recompense, and to ultimately
improve the relationships between content creators/producers and
news aggregators and search engines.
The group will examine whether new standards and policies can be
drafted to formalize the commercial relationship between
publishers and the search engines and content aggregators, which
provide a valuable service to publishers in terms of traffic
generation but have built their business models in large part on
taking content for free.
The group will also explore the options open to newspaper, book
and magazine publishers, including collective action, either at a
national or international level, together with questions
regarding copyright enforcement and brand infringement.
As one of its first steps, the group will be seeking meetings
with Mr. Charlie McCreevy, European Union Commissioner for the
Internal Market and Services, and Ms. Viviane Reding, the
Commissioner for Information Society and Media.
"The search engines are increasingly aiming their strategic
efforts at traditional content originators and aggregators like
newspaper publishers. The irony is that these search engines
exist, largely, because of the traditional news and content
aggregators and profit at their expense", said Gavin O'Reilly,
the WAN President, who is chairing the task force.
Mr O'Reilly, who calls the process the 'Napsterisation' of
content (after the conflict between the Napster search engine and
the music industry), added: "Google, Yahoo and other search
engines are not some new breed of social benefactors of
information - they are assuredly commercial, very-much-for-profit
organizations and not the new Robin Hoods. WAN is also extremely
concerned about the behaviour of several major search engines
when faced with the censorship demands of repressive regimes.
The first meeting of the task force included representatives of
the World Association of Newspapers (WAN) and its division for
senior news executives, the World Editors Forum, (WEF),
International Publishers Association (IPA), the International
Federation of the Periodical Press (FIPP), the European
Federation of Magazine Publishers (ENPA), the European Publishers
Council (EPC), the European Magazine Publishers Association
(FAEP) and SPMI (French association for magazine publishers),
Agence France-Presse (AFP), the association of French national
newspapers, SPP, and the French regional daily newspaper
association, SPQR.
The Paris-based WAN, the global organisation for the newspaper
industry, represents 18,000 newspapers; its membership includes
73 national newspaper associations, newspapers and newspaper
executives in 102 countries, 11 news agencies and nine regional
and world-wide press groups.
Inquiries to: Larry Kilman, Director of Communications, WAN, 7
rue Geoffroy St Hilaire, 75005 Paris France. Tel: +33 1 47 42 85
00. Fax: +33 1 47 42 49 48. Mobile: +33 6 10 28 97 36. E-mail:
lkilman@wan.asso.fr
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