Google responds to publishers

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According to Rob Salkowitz of Internet Evolution, in the so-​​called Hamburg Declaration issued July 9, pub­lish­ers argued that ser­vices like Google are “using the work of authors, pub­lish­ers and broad­cast­ers with­out pay­ing for it”:

Numerous providers are using the work of authors, pub­lish­ers and broad­cast­ers with­out pay­ing for it. Over the long term, this threat­ens the pro­duc­tion of high-​​quality con­tent and the exis­tence of inde­pen­dent journalism. …

Universal access to our ser­vices should be avail­able, but going for­ward we no longer wish to be forced to give away prop­erty with­out hav­ing granted permission.

We there­fore wel­come the grow­ing resolve of fed­eral and state gov­ern­ments all over the world to con­tinue to sup­port the pro­tec­tion of the rights of authors, pub­lish­ers and broad­cast­ers on the Internet.

Salkowitz points to Google’s sim­ple response:

“We agree,” wrote Cohen on Google’s European Public Policy Blog on July 15. “If a web­mas­ter wants to stop us from crawl­ing a spe­cific page, he or she can do so by adding '<meta name="googlebot" content="noindex">' to the page. In short, if you don’t want to show up in Google search results, it doesn’t require more than one or two lines of code.”

He points out that, basi­cally, if news­pa­pers want to go back to the “old way” for them­selves, they can. No need to change the law to pre­vent Google from index­ing their con­tent. But of course, this isn’t really want pub­lish­ers want.

In truth, pub­lish­ers get value from Google — value that is nec­es­sary for them to com­pete and mar­ket them­selves today. So they need Google or ser­vices like them. This makes their attacks on Google a dis­trac­tion from the real issues for them, which really involves a busi­ness model that can’t com­pete well in today’s marketplace.

There are a num­ber of choices, two of which seem most obvi­ous: change the law or change the model. Unsurprisingly, pub­lish­ers want to change the law.

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