
"The European Commission has
imposed a EUR 561 million fine on Microsoft for failing to comply with its commitments to offer users a browser choice screen enabling them to easily choose their preferred web browser. In 2009, the Commission had made these commitments legally binding on Microsoft until 2014. In today's decision, the Commission finds that Microsoft failed to roll out the browser choice screen with its Windows 7 Service Pack 1 from May 2011 until July 2012. 15 million Windows users in the EU therefore did not see the choice screen during this period. Microsoft has acknowledged that the choice screen was not displayed during that time."
Burn.
Member since:
2008-06-02
I'm not terribly familiar with those laws, but from the sources I see (including yours) everyone is allowed to display excerpts, such as those displayed by search engines today. It's just longer pieces that would need to be licensed for republication.
Really, now? From the very first paragraph of the first article I linked to:
"The lower house of the German parliament, known as the Bundestag, has approved a new bill that would require search engines to pay a license fee for re-publishing content longer than 'individual words or short excerpts.'
Of course, the actual amount of text isn't defined, so for all we know it could be anything beyond the headline. That would be consistent with the earlier extortion attempts by French media:
"Google already has a licensing deal with Agence France-Presse, the French newswire. That deal was struck in 2007, after AFP filed a lawsuit saying Google's use of snippets violated copyright."
In that case, they (and you) should be thrilled that Google has stated that they will simply stop indexing news from countries that pass protectionist IP laws. But no, they seem to be even more about about that possibility.... it's almost French & German news media want to have their cake (referral traffic from Google news) AND eat it too (laws that allow them to leech money from foreign companies). But that can't possibly be it, we all that things like that only happen the US.
Frankly, I hope those idiotic laws pass and Google stops indexing those sites. And I'm sure there are French news sources in other countries that would be more than happy to get that referral traffic & fill the gaps.