The Copyright Debate and RSS
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Title: The Copyright Debate and RSS
Word Count: 566
Author: Sharon Housley
Email: sharon@notepage.com
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The Copyright Debate and RSS
Copyright 2005 Sharon Housley
The Copyright Debate & RSS
RSS is commonly defined as really simple syndication. So,
this means that any material contained in a feed is
available for syndication, right? Well no, not exactly. It
means that the content contained in an RSS feed is in a
format that is syndication friendly, if the copyright
holder allows for syndication. Offering a feed for
syndication does not in fact grant any legal rights to
anyone to reuse the feeds content beyond what the Copyright
laws grant as Fair Use.
In practice, while your feed might legally be protected,
you could literally spend weeks attempting to protect the
contents of your feed. Legal gray areas are introduced with
Search Engines indexing feeds and RSS Feed Directories
including copywritten feeds, in their categorized
directories. How do you distinguish between a legitimate
search engine, RSS directory and someone simply reproducing
the contents of a feed for personal gain? Legally how can
you defend against one and not the other?
One can ask whether it is legally is it wrong to reproduce
content in a feed. Morally is it wrong? Does the site have
a purpose or value outside of the syndicated content? Is
the aggregation of topic specific feeds in itself a value?
If you use the feeds for content and label the site a
directory does that make it any more legal? What about
personal web aggregators? If it is for personal use,is it
OK?
Take a look at the following topic specific feed
directories:
Financial Investing - www.finance-investing.com
or
Security Protection - www.security-protection.net
One could argue that the above sites do in fact provide
value, aggregating and categorizing related topic specific
feeds in a single location. In fact those in the security
sector of the finance arena might find the above sites of
significant value but what of the content creators?
Laws and Technology Collide
Most people publishing content via RSS support
republication of feeds. Because the technology is fairly
new, the laws and legalities are still murky. It is assumed
that content in RSS is protected by copyright laws but let
us not forget the Internet is global and their is not a
centralized body governing what is right or what is wrong.
Not only does law and technology collide the laws of
different countries, those creating the feed and those
displaying the contents of the feed may contradict each
other. It is for this reason, I would advise that
publishers using RSS to assume that the contents of their
RSS feeds will be syndicated and replicated.
Tips and Tricks to Protect Your Feed.
That is not to say there are not things that can be done to
protect feeds. At the end of the day being proactive is the
best way to protect intellectual property.
Part of feed protection is ensuring that appropriate credit
is given, this can be arranged by including a copyright
assignment in the final line of the Item Description field.
Additionally you can include links back to your website in
the Item description field.
Use teaser copy in the RSS feed's Item description field,
linking back to your website which contains the full
contents of the post.
At the end of the day, protecting the contents of a feed
can be daunting and limiting. Controlling your contents to
ensure appropriate credit and links are included is
critical.
About the Author:
Sharon Housley manages marketing for FeedForAll
www.feedforall.com software for creating, editing,
publishing RSS feeds and podcasts. In addition Sharon
manages marketing for NotePage www.notepage.net a
wireless text messaging software company.
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