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AP Takes on Drudge Retort Over Copyright Use


Last week, the Associated Press (“AP”) sent a takedown request under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to Rogers
Cadenhead, the founder of Drudge Retort, a liberal alternative to (and parody of) the well-known Drudge Report,
demanding that he remove six user-submitted blog entries and one user
comment on the site that contained quotations from AP articles. Today,
the New York Times
reported that AP was reconsidering its request while it creates a set
of guidelines for bloggers and websites that excerpt AP material.

The Drudge Retort is a community site similar to Digg and Reddit,
allowing its users to contribute blog entries, comments, and links to
interesting news articles. According to Cadenhead, none of the six
posts republished the full text of
an AP story; instead, each contained quotes ranging in length from 33
to 79 words (although the posts have been removed, Cadenhead has
provided a summary of them here).

Of course, you might be skeptical whether such minimal — and no doubt
widespread — quoting of AP content is actually copyright infringement,
and you’d be right. Indeed, a number of prominent bloggers took AP to
task (see here and here)
for sending the takedown notice and ignoring what has become the
general practice in the blogging community of using headlines and
excerpted quotes from MSM sources. As Jeff Jarvis notes, the AP “is ignoring the essential structure of the link architecture of the web. It is declaring war on blogs and commenters.”

In fact, it is very likely that the posts AP is complaining about on Drudge Retort are permissible fair uses
under the Copyright Act. First, several posts appear to be offering
commentary on recent news items. The use of another’s copyrighted work
for the purpose of
criticism, news reporting, or commentary, will generally weigh in favor
of fair use.

Second, all of the posts use fewer than 80 words from the original AP
articles. While there is no bright line that defines how much of a
copyrighted work can be copied and still be considered fair use, courts
will consider the amount and importance of the material copied in
assessing what is permissible. I can’t tell how long the original AP
articles were, but it’s likely that all of the articles were
substantially longer than 80 words.

Third, it is hard to see how the posting of AP headlines and 80 word
snippets could possibly impair the market for the original AP articles
(when evaluating fair use claims, courts are most concerned with
whether the copying will undercut the market for the original work).
Instead, the posts AP is complaining about would seem to be doing just
the opposite. Users of Drudge Retort, and sites like it, post these
headlines and snippets for the very purpose of alerting others that
some interesting piece of news exists. These snippets invariably
include links to the original articles and serve to drive traffic to
the site hosting the original AP story.

While the June 10, 2008 takedown request from AP only mentions copyright infringement as a justification for the removal, a June 3 letter sent by AP’s Intellectual Property Governance Coordinator, Irene Keselman, also asserted a “hot news” misappropriation claim:

AP considers taking the
headline and lede of a story without a proper license to be an
infringement of its copyrights, and additionally constitutes “hot news”
misappropriation.

It doesn’t appear, however, that AP is continuing to pursue a “hot news”
misappropriation claim against Drudge Retort, and for good reason. This
little known legal doctrine, which saw its genesis in 1918 in International News Service v. Associated Press,
248 U.S. 215 (1918), seems to have fallen out of favor because the 1976
Copyright Act preempts all legal and equitable rights that are
equivalent to the exclusive rights offered by federal copyright law. As
a result, in National Basketball Ass’n v. Motorola,
105 F.3d 841, 844 (1997), one of the few cases to address a “hot news”
claim, the Second Circuit set an exceptionally high standard for such
claims to be viable, requiring, among other things, that the
information be time-sensitive; the defendant be in direct competition
with the plaintiff; and the continued publishing of the “hot news”
would so reduce the plaintiff’s incentive to produce the product or
service that its existence or quality would be substantially
threatened.

Accordingly, to succeed with a “hot news” misappropriation claim, AP
would have to prove not only that the Drudge Retort is a direct
competitor to the AP, but also that its headlines and text were
time-sensitive and Retort’s use of this content would so harm the 1,500
member news cooperative that their continued publication would threaten
AP’s existence.

Perhaps because AP recognizes that its legal claims against Drudge Retort and its users are weak
or because it has realized that its “heavy handed“ approach might be
counterproductive, it announced that it would rethink its
policies toward bloggers and come up with a set of guidelines for others to use
its articles.

I think it’s laudable that AP is rethinking its approach and planning to meet with representatives of the Media Bloggers Association and others, but let’s be clear here. While AP is entitled to
issue a set of guidelines for the use of its articles, these guidelines are not legally enforceable and they
cannot narrow the scope of what is permissible under the fair use doctrine. The blogging community needs to be
careful not to allow these guidelines to become a de facto set of norms that constrain the permissible uses
of news content.

Fair use permits a broad array of innovative and transformative uses
of
copyrighted material. It also is essential to ensuring that copyright
holders don’t trample on First Amendment rights. In the end, AP and
other news organizations will be better off if they work together with
bloggers and community news sites to expand, enhance, and contextualize
news. Let’s hope the AP’s guidelines take this into account.

(You can follow further developments in the AP’s dealings with Drudge Retort in the Citizen Media Law Project’s Legal Threats Database entry: Associated Press v. Drudge Retort.)

David Ardia :

View Comments (12)

  • David articulated the fair use test quite clearly. One of the things that makes fair use so difficult to get a handle on is the fact that it is a four factor balancing test. As he correctly states, a use doesn't have to be transformative to be considered a fair use, but it does increase the likelihood that courts will find it to be a fair use.

    The same analysis applies to the other factors, which often makes it difficult to definitively predict how a court will rule.

  • In the article, you mention the "Media Bloggers Association". I have never heard of them. Nobody I know has ever heard of them. Are they just an AP astroturf organization?

  • UPDATE: On June 20, 2008, Cadenhead and AP announced that they had settled their copyright dispute. The six posts in question, however, remain inaccessible on the Drudge Retort.

  • Incredibly, I find that AP in 2007 signed an agreement to work with NowPublic.Com, a self-professed "social networking" site to use information from NowPublic's contributors.

    I've reviewed NowPublic and find that "contributors" copy and past copyrighted material on the site with a link to the media source.

    This is identical to what DrudgeRetort users were doing, with the exception that the pasted excerpts on NowPublic are quite lengthy.

    I ask -- how can one "social networking" site do it and another (DrudgeRetort) is sandbagged?

  • Hypocrisy update: AP joined by New York Times, Washington Post, others in using information obtained by Bill Conroy of Narco News without credit.

    @bill dupuy- Associated Press is obviously not being consistent in only going after DrudgeRetort, and it's a good point that they have a professional relationship with one of the thousands of high-profile sites they are ignoring. However, if NowPublic strains the bounds of Fair Use, it is a great example of why those bounds need to be expanded, not contracted. NowPublic takes the source of a story from any post -- a cross-posting, a link, a re-posting, or something completely original -- and allows media like photos and video to be attached to it, as well as commentary and comments and community ratings.

    (Aside: And it runs on the Drupal content management system which my work and Related Content are for.)

    (The conflicts of interest in this post are almost too numerous to mention: I volunteer for the Fund for Authentic Journalism which supports the Narco News Bulletin and I make my living deploying Drupal sites with Agaric Design Collective.)

  • Thinking this through even more, I question whether Associated Press actually has much say in the matter. These are the reasons:

    (1) Much of the material Associated Press runs is taken from its member newspapers and publications. As soon as the member generates material, "Copyright is secured automatically when the work is created," according to the Copyright Office Thus, with material picked up from members, the original copyright rests with them, not Associated Press.

    (2) Associated Press would be able to acquire the original copyright from the member source, but it takes written documentation and registration with the copyright office. It's unlikely, however, that the Washington Post is going to transfer all of its rights in full.

    (3) Associated Press would be able to "share" the copyright under transfer rules, but it must have an agreement with the original author to do so. Just asking to use and redistribute the material shouldn't be sufficient.

    **(My broadcast organization is a "subscriber member" of the Associated Press. Here is the total sum of all our membership agreement has to say about AP's right to use my material:

    **"Subscriber shall, without cost to (AP), promptly make available to (AP) .... all information original to the Subscribe in all forms gathered by Subscriber that is spontaneous in its origin, for use in news report(s) of AP and its subsidiaries."

    **That's it. No request to "share" copyright.

    Associated Press may place the copyright notice on material I and other subscriber members turn over under our agreement, but it is meaningless. We've simply granted them a license to use it, not to share in the copyright.

    I may place a copyright notice on any material I get from an associate and I may do it forever. But it has no meaning. Thus, the Associated Press notice on material picked up from the Washington Post similarly has no meaning.

    The Copyright Office has no means or authority or desire to enforce the notion of copyrighted material. It is the concern of the original author who may, or may not, call on a trespasser to cease and desist.

    My conclusion: Member subscribers of Associated Press have not taken steps to tell their press association to stop "pretending" to have the copyright authority over material they supply AP. But that's OK. They still own the copyright anyway. It cannot be taken away. By the same token, AP has oversteped in claiming rights they do not have.

    All of this tempest about bloggers has been nothing more than "selective harrassment."

  • Hi All,

    We do provide Associated Press (AP) Video Contents in :

    http://tv.kompas.com/ap
    OR
    http://tv.kompas.com/content/view/5739/246/

    These sections are all about AP Video contents, still in Original Source...

    KOMPAS-TV.COM is an Indonesian Video Streaming web site, which has been appointed by AP to do VIDEO STREAMING for their contents in ASIA.

    ===
    Original Source : Associated Press (AP)
    Associated Press (AP) in Indonesia :
    * http://www.kompas-tv.com (General News and Information on Video Streaming)
    * http://www.seleb.tv (Infotainment on Video Streaming)
    * http://www.kompase.com (Entertainment on Video Streaming)
    * http://www.videoku.tv (User Uploaded Video Streaming)
    ===

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