Online Journalism News
ACAP project aims to make search engines respect publishers' rights
A pilot project to create an automated system to allow online publishers to grant search engines like Google permission to use their content will launch early next month.
The ACAP (Automated Content Access Protocol) project is hoping to develop a platform that would allow search engines to recognise the terms and conditions of specific websites.
Developers see the project as the first step towards creating a standard business model for search engines' use of content.
London-based firm Rightscom has been commissioned by the organisations behind the initiative to act as project co-ordinator.
The World Association of Newspapers (WAN), the European Publishers Council (EPC), the International Publishers Association (IPA) and the European Newspapers Association (ENPA) are providing funding for the 12-month trial.
Speaking at an AOP briefing, Mark Bide, director of Rightscom, called the project an 'enablement mechanism not an enforcement mechanism' that would have benefit for consumers, publishers and the intermediary aggregators and search engines.
Some publishers, however, remain sceptical about the use of any ACAP platform and fear that the technology could become obsolete quickly or that large search engines would simply ignore it.
The project will initially just look at text-based content on both open and closed networks. Mr Bide said there was scope to expand the project to look at audio and video.
Six large publishers from across the globe - covering newspaper, magazine, book, information and academic publication - are likely to be involved, he said.
He also said ACAP was in talks with the world's three largest search engines and was hopeful that at least one would sign up.
Last week, at the Society of Editors conference, in Glasgow, Nathan Stoll, product manager of Google News, said that the search giant was willing to work with the ACAP proposal.
At the Beyond the Printed Word conference, also last week in Vienna, Simon Waldman, Guardian Media Group's director of digital strategy and advocate of the ACAP project, said an industry-standard approach was needed to establish a rights payment system as many companies 'on the fringes' were forming formidable advertising-based businesses using publisher's online content.
He also said that this might only come about if laws existed to force the search engines and aggregators to pay.
The ACAP (Automated Content Access Protocol) project is hoping to develop a platform that would allow search engines to recognise the terms and conditions of specific websites.
Developers see the project as the first step towards creating a standard business model for search engines' use of content.
London-based firm Rightscom has been commissioned by the organisations behind the initiative to act as project co-ordinator.
The World Association of Newspapers (WAN), the European Publishers Council (EPC), the International Publishers Association (IPA) and the European Newspapers Association (ENPA) are providing funding for the 12-month trial.
Speaking at an AOP briefing, Mark Bide, director of Rightscom, called the project an 'enablement mechanism not an enforcement mechanism' that would have benefit for consumers, publishers and the intermediary aggregators and search engines.
Some publishers, however, remain sceptical about the use of any ACAP platform and fear that the technology could become obsolete quickly or that large search engines would simply ignore it.
The project will initially just look at text-based content on both open and closed networks. Mr Bide said there was scope to expand the project to look at audio and video.
Six large publishers from across the globe - covering newspaper, magazine, book, information and academic publication - are likely to be involved, he said.
He also said ACAP was in talks with the world's three largest search engines and was hopeful that at least one would sign up.
Last week, at the Society of Editors conference, in Glasgow, Nathan Stoll, product manager of Google News, said that the search giant was willing to work with the ACAP proposal.
At the Beyond the Printed Word conference, also last week in Vienna, Simon Waldman, Guardian Media Group's director of digital strategy and advocate of the ACAP project, said an industry-standard approach was needed to establish a rights payment system as many companies 'on the fringes' were forming formidable advertising-based businesses using publisher's online content.
He also said that this might only come about if laws existed to force the search engines and aggregators to pay.
Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
Sign up here for our free, daily email newsletter to get all the latest stories, jobs, tips and more.
Got a story? Call our news team on +44 (0)1273 384290 or email them.
Other recent news
News feed- ABCe figures: Guardian breaks 20m barrier, Mail Online falls to fourth
- Max Mosley case: statement from Colin Myler, NOTW editor
- Max Mosley wins privacy case against News of the World
- Trinity to launch mobile sites for 14 titles
- Guardian appoints Washington Post digital executive Caroline Little
- >> more news
Most commented on
- Greenslade leaves NUJ because of new media debate
- Birmingham Post goes 'web-first' with site relaunch
- Journalism.co.uk exposes the ease of accessing private information on social networks
- Live: first ever online broadcast of a UK newspaper's editorial conference
- Future of NUJ's The Journalist magazine 'under review'
Related news
Features
Features feed- Interview: Alex Ballantyne, MD of Hearst Digital 'Why rush? We're building properties for the medium to long term, not short-term gain'
- James Du Bern, Current UK: "nobody delivers news in a way that’s adapted to how young people consume media"
- Telegraph.co.uk breaking news strategy - key staff as 'story owners'
- Freelancers see the value in trawling web for copyrighted content
- Accessibility 2.0: How user-friendly is the Daily Mail to the blind and visually impaired?
- >> more features
JOB OF THE WEEK
Senior lecturer in radio journalism
Are you keen to pass on your professional experience to tomorrow's journalists? ...more
Freelancers for hire
...see allDISPLAY ADVERTISING
Target our journalism community of 15,600 subscribers and 75k+ visitors monthly. Call Ellie on 01273 384291


Comments
No comments
You must be registered in order to post a comment. Click here to register or login below if you are already registered:
Forgotten your password? Please click here