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The Rise of the News Aggregator: Legal Implications and Best Practices
During the past decade, the Internet has become an important news source for the majority of Americans. According to a study conducted by the Pew Internet and American Life Project, as of January 2010, nearly 61% of Americans got at least some of their news online in a typical day. This increased reliance on the Internet as a source of news has coincided with declining profits in the traditional media and the shuttering of newsrooms in communities across the country. Some commentators look at this confluence of events and assert that, in this case, correlation equals causation -- the Internet is harming the news business.One explanation for the decline of the traditional media that some, including News Corporation owner Rupert Murdoch and Associated Press Chairman Dean Singleton, have seized upon is the rise of the news aggregator. According to this theory, news aggregators from Google News to The Huffington Post are free-riding, reselling and profiting from the factual information gathered by traditional media organizations at great cost. Murdoch has gone so far as to call Google's aggregation and display of newspaper headlines and ledes "theft." As the traditional media are quick to point out, the legality of a business model built around the monetization of third-party content isn't merely an academic question -- it's big business. Revenues generated from online advertising totaled $23.4 billion in 2008 alone.But for all of the heated rhetoric blaming news aggregators for the decline of journalism, many are still left asking the question: are news aggregators violating current law?This white paper attempts to answer that question by examining the hot news misappropriation and copyright infringement claims that are often asserted against aggregators, and to provide news aggregators with some "best practices" for making use of third-party content
Core compactness and diagonality in spaces of open sets
We investigate when the space of open subsets of a topological
space endowed with the Scott topology is core compact. Such conditions turn
out to be related to infraconsonance of , which in turn is characterized in
terms of coincidence of the Scott topology of
with the product of the Scott topologies of at . On the
other hand, we characterize diagonality of endowed with the
Scott convergence and show that this space can be diagonal without being
pretopological. New examples are provided to clarify the relationship between
pretopologicity, topologicity and diagonality of this important convergence
space.Comment: revised version 12/06/10: example of a -core compact convergence
space that is not -dual adde
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