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Allbuffs will no longer be posting articles from The Denver Post.

Matt

OddlySocial
Club Member
Notice to readers about Denver Post copyright protections

The Denver Post has always taken copyright issues very seriously, both as a creator of content and as a user of other people's content. In fact, everything that appears in a typical edition of the newspaper is copyright protected.

Full Denver Post article can be found here. http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_16594528
 
Okey dokey.

Headlines and links okay? A gentle paraphrase of the content?

If you quote the Denver Post, you should limit it to the headline and no more than 2 sentences or lines of type + a link to the original article. No photos from the DP.
 
God newspapers can burn in hell. How much ****ing traffic do they get from sites like ours? They don't understand the new age. Dumbasses
 
Fukkem. It's not like I needed an excuse to quit reading that rag. How did The Rocky Mountain News lose to these clowns again?
 
If you quote the Denver Post, you should limit it to the headline and no more than 2 sentences or lines of type + a link to the original article. You should also be ashamed of yourself for taking the Post seriously.


fify


If we want to see what the post has to say about CU football, we can just go to an Oregon board where Henderson probably posts all of his articles first anyway.
 
Fine by me! Those tree hugging, welfare loving, bleeding heart liberals can suck me anyway. Now, can we figure out a way to make BCS no longer post his info on this board?
 
Well that's one way not to have to be confronted by Henderson's drivel, Woody's wordiness and Kiszla's crud.

If that means no more Natalie Messler and Tom what's his face, then that's a price I can afford.
 
Death to dinosaur media. Most there **** is garbage anyway looking at you Henderson.

I wouls recommend cancelling your subscription, those that have it.
 
Fine by me! Those tree hugging, welfare loving, bleeding heart liberals can suck me anyway. Now, can we figure out a way to make BCS no longer post his info on this board?

:stupid: Ideology has nothing to do with it, bad business is bad business.
 
Matt, did they email you to stop or did you find this somewhere?

They posted a notice on their website this morning. They're ok with posting a little bit of an article or a headline. Not with a whole article (that's always been against the policy here anyway) or their pictures. They topped it off by threatening legal action against violators. We really don't need that kind of liability, so we won't be posting their **** anymore, and we'll have to monitor what everybody else posts. Thanks to Jizzla and Woody, most of their crap won't be missed....
 
They posted a notice on their website this morning. They're ok with posting a little bit of an article or a headline. Not with a whole article (that's always been against the policy here anyway) or their pictures. They topped it off by threatening legal action against violators. We really don't need that kind of liability, so we won't be posting their **** anymore, and we'll have to monitor what everybody else posts. Thanks to Jizzla and Woody, most of their crap won't be missed....

I don't post much from The Post. Too bad for them. I have to tell you I am awed by how much things have changed in the 12 years that I left the biz. Its been a sea change for the industry. I am not sure we are better off. If the Post succumbs we will be getting our Buff stories from 9news. [/shiver] TV is too shallow.
 
I don't post much from The Post. Too bad for them. I have to tell you I am awed by how much things have changed in the 12 years that I left the biz. Its been a sea change for the industry. I am not sure we are better off. If the Post succumbs we will be getting our Buff stories from 9news. [/shiver] TV is too shallow.

The newspaper industry ****ed themselves when they established their web sites as free content for anybody to read when they first went on the web. Ad revenue isn't going to keep them alive, and they've now established in people's minds that they shouldn't have to pay to read the content online. Paying people to generate content that you turn around and give away is simply not a reasonable way to try to generate profits....
 
The newspaper industry ****ed themselves when they established their web sites as free content for anybody to read when they first went on the web. Ad revenue isn't going to keep them alive, and they've now established in people's minds that they shouldn't have to pay to read the content online. Paying people to generate content that you turn around and give away is simply not a reasonable way to try to generate profits....

It's a little more complicated than that but your pretty spot on.

I'll give you an example. The Associated Press has an office in Denver as it does most all state capitals. The AP employs writers and photographers that pool coverage of the State House and Denver Sports etc. Which is funded by the AP members (GJ paper, Durango, Greeley, Fort Collins, Pueblo, etc.) Those papers get to use the stories without sending a writer-a big savings because they have access to the wire.

The AP could see this thing coming from miles away and sat sort of neutral while online establishments began buying AP memberships and publishing the stories. Thus they offered a free version of the same story. AFP, Reuters, all did this. It's competition kinda like being outsourced to China or Mexico. To survive these little papers and even the Post concentrate on local stories, HS sports, Local Governemnt, for example, that the AP does not cover to remain relevant.

When the race to the bottom ends I am not sure we will be better informed.
 
Gee no more idiots like Woody Paige - what will I do? Newspapers will join vinyl records in the trash heap. My blackberry is easier to read on the pot anyway.
 
One of their prep writers, Ryan Casey, posted a note on the Rivals Prep site a few weeks ago, I should have saved it.
Basically, if you want to write the headline, a summary sentence (what you are linking to) and the link, they have no problem with that.

In fact, he posted on Rivals and thanked someone for doing just that.
 
One of their prep writers, Ryan Casey, posted a note on the Rivals Prep site a few weeks ago, I should have saved it.
Basically, if you want to write the headline, a summary sentence (what you are linking to) and the link, they have no problem with that.

In fact, he posted on Rivals and thanked someone for doing just that.

**** that. If you post one sentence too many, they sue not only the site but also the person who put it up. They can kiss my sweaty nutsack.
 
One of their prep writers, Ryan Casey, posted a note on the Rivals Prep site a few weeks ago, I should have saved it.
Basically, if you want to write the headline, a summary sentence (what you are linking to) and the link, they have no problem with that.

In fact, he posted on Rivals and thanked someone for doing just that.

This is exactly right. We have no problem with people linking to our stuff, so long as they do it in a fair way. (In other words, like AlferdJasper said: headline, one or two paragraphs of the story, and then a link.)

Ryan
 
This is exactly right. We have no problem with people linking to our stuff, so long as they do it in a fair way. (In other words, like AlferdJasper said: headline, one or two paragraphs of the story, and then a link.)

Ryan

Thanks for clarifying Ryan.

For us, it is scary to think that we could cross that line without realizing it. We are a non-profit, privately owned website and it is tough for me to think of the effect that litigation could have on myself and my family. Are we overly worrying? Absolutely we are... but not without good reason. We've seen some of the lawsuits that have come out recently.

I will discuss this with the other admins to see if we want to loosen the policy.
 
Once the Denver Post fires Jizla and Henderson, I'll read them again. Until that time, I really don't care what their policy is about linking content.
 
Once the Denver Post fires Jizla and Henderson, I'll read them again. Until that time, I really don't care what their policy is about linking content.

Well, then this would work out beautifully for you, because we can tell you when another Post writer has something of interest, and the rest of the time you can avoid. I also do not read Henderson. It doesn't matter what the topic, it's just my personal rule.

There have been, and will be, some great stories and profiles on Colorado preps next year that you may want to know about.

The Buffs are looking at a number of in-staters.
 
The company that was founded to enforce the print-media copyrights, Righthaven, has been getting pounded in the courts.

From the linked article below:
Many of its early lawsuits targeted websites for comments and forum posts by the site’s readers. The plan hit a major snag in June, however, when Chief U.S. District Judge Roger Hunt of Nevada threw out a copyright lawsuit against the Democratic Underground blog for allegedly clipping four paragraphs from a 34-paragraph story published by the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Stephens Media’s flagship paper.

The issue in that case, and most others since, is Righthaven’s legal standing to sue over Stephens Media copyrights.
It turns out Righthaven didn’t own the copyrights it was filing suit over. Instead, Stephens Media granted Righthaven permission to sue over the newspaper chain’s content in exchange for a 50 percent cut of all the settlements and jury awards: the agreement did not grant Righthaven license to use the content in any other way. The EFF called it a “sham.” Judge Hunt agreed, ruling that a “copyright owner cannot assign a bare right to sue.” (.pdf)

http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/09/righthaven-on-life-support/
 
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