Online Journalism News
Belgian court makes Google de-list news stories
Google News has been ordered by a Belgian court to stop publishing snippets of stories by French-language newspapers or face hefty fines.The ruling, issued earlier this month, gave Google until today to comply with demands to de-list or face paying a daily fine of a million euros (£675,000 pounds).
The complaint against the search engine was lodged by Copiepresse, the company responsible for the copyright interests of French and German-language newspapers in Belgium.
According to Reuters, news.google.be claimed to have removed all offending links from its site and was in the process of removing them from other sites.
"We are asking for Google to pay and seek our authorisation to use our content ... Google sells advertising and makes money on our content," Margaret Boribon, general secretary of Copiepresse, told Reuters.
Google News sites do not carry any advertising, however Google search results, which can link to news stories, can carry paid for adverts.
Boribon added that she was informing her European counterparts about the Belgian court ruling, and that similar actions could be brought elsewhere in Europe.
The ruling could send a shockwave through Google as several other media groups have become concerned about their content being given away for free via search engines.
A Google spokesperson said the company intended to appeal against the decision and that it was policy to remove any newspaper's content from its index if asked.
Tags (click tag to find related articles; click icon for feed):
google
|
reuters
|
search engines
|
europe
|
belgium
|
search engine
|
person communication and meetings
|
eur
|
media groups
|
search results
|
copiepresse
|
belgian court
|
margaret boribon
|
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- Telegraph staff could strike for first time in 19 years
- Reuters using mobile journalism for US political coverage
- Getty Images partners video search engine blinkx
- PA makes senior appointments in multimedia expansion
- News International mobile leader Andrew Bagguley leaves
- >> 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
- Reuters using mobile journalism for US political coverage
- Guardian bought Madeleine McCann link by mistake, says marketing director
- Telegraph selects Google Apps for its journalists
- Adrie van der Luijt parts company with Atalink
- Laura Rainbow takes up role as reporter on Camping & Caravanning magazine
Features
Features feed- Who's behind Wikipedia: Virgil Griffith's WikiScanner investigates
- Crime maps and journalism: the Berlingske Tidende model
- 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'
- >> more features
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