* Illegal Feeds And Betting Against The Internet

The clue train has left the station, and most publishers aren’t on board.

Worst Practices: Betting Against The Net

Ease-of-copying is a feature, not a bug. Learn to harness that feature, and you’ll have a bright future. Try to fight that feature, and you’ll be fighting gravity.

Since the phrase “the Internet” entered popular culture in the early 1990s, I’ve been preaching about the Internet’s many advantages. One of the Internet’s biggest advantage is ease-of-copying. Once piece of content can quickly and easily turn into many pieces of content. This changes everything. Or rather, should change everything. Yet publishers remain mostly clueless about how to leverage the Internet, insisting that the Internet’ biggest asset is a bug.

In November 2006, Google CEO Eric Schmidt coined the phrase “betting against the Internet” when he said (emphasis added):

“What’s surprising is that so many companies are still betting against the net, trying to solve today’s problems with yesterday’s solutions. The past few years have taught us that business models based on controlling consumers or content don’t work. Betting against the net is foolish because you’re betting against human ingenuity…”

Examples Of Betting Against The Net

Illegal Feeds

When publishers provide partial feeds for their content – or no feeds at all – third parties step in to fix the problem. Gravity. You’re fighting gravity.

For example, I enjoy reading (and legally reprinting) the Dilbert comic strip and Scott Adams’s blog (by Dilbert’s creator). But Dilbert’s publisher, United Media, does not provide a Dilbert feed. Enter Tapestry Comics, which provides feeds for comics, both official and “unauthorized.” The Tapestry Comics Dilbert feed is a full feed. I read it in Google Reader, I share it in Google Reader.

The phrase “illegal feeds” makes a good headline, but it is legally accurate? Is “unauthorized feeds” accurate? Do you need the permission of the copyright owner to read their copyrighted works, or is this fair use? What about sharing an “unauthorized” feed item? Discuss.

Another example. Earlier this year, a certain blog about a popular (freaky?) economics book closed down its standalone blog and moved to a large New York City newspaper website. As part of the transition, the blog moved from a full feed to a partial feed. It’s ironic than an economics blog doesn’t get the economics of blogging. As with the Dilbert blog, an “unauthorized” full feed for the freaky economics book blog quickly popped up. I’ve been reading the unauthorized full feed in Google Reader, and I’ve been sharing it in Google Reader (alongside the inferior partial feed). And why do I not mention the blog by name? Because that blog has a nasty habit of changing stuff for the worse after I blog about them. So they shall now be known as “the freaky economics book blog that shall not be named.”

You can also use FeedYes to get feeds from sites without feeds. And you can use Yahoo search results as a proxy to gets feeds from any site since Yahoo provides feeds for search results. (Google does not. Why, Google, why?)

You can use BugMeNot to bypass newspaper registration pages. BitTorrent to find TV shows. And these are just the examples of betting against the Internet (and the workarounds of those betting on the Internet) that came to mind off the top of my head. There are many more.

Not Everybody Is Clueless

In contrast, Apple bets on the Net when it sells music tracks on iTunes for a reasonable price without copy-protection technology (so-called Digital Rights Management (DRM)).

I bet on the Net when I published my book “The Legal List” simultaneously in print (for a fee) and online (for free) using a Creative-Commons-like print-and-pay copyright notice. This was in 1992, fifteen years ago.

Railroads, electricity, the industrial revolution, television, the Internet. Each revolution has had its opponents. But every technological advance that increases efficiently is a good thing. When efficiency increases, qualify of life improves for everyone. Efficiency is good, inefficiency is bad.

Don’t bet against the Internet. I’d like to see the end of the dark age of the Internet in my lifetime.

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4 Replies to “* Illegal Feeds And Betting Against The Internet”

  1. I can understand that websites and other things need to generate an income, so I would not personally be against havening half a feed, I just don’t know how to set those up yet. If people don’t come to my site I might not loose readers but I might loose clicks or advert views. Would that reduce the price I can get for my adverts? More than likely.

    I am just getting started myself, I have my feed pumped into another site so I can post on my site and yes half a feed is shown on there. Its called Myrl it gives me a profile page and allows my feeds to be pumped in to be shown to all virtual world readers of that site. This brings people back to my site and gives them a chance to be aware of it.

    However, There are sites out there stealing the rss feed and reposting it under there own name. I got hit by one that has a WordPress plugin to do it all for them. It is shameful and lazy and if I catch any site doing it I will come down hard with what ever laws apply. They can not say they did not know, because I included at the bottom of my rss, a report of copyright and my url and to report back if found on another site.

    This is via a wordpress plugin, and keeps me sleeping soundly at night no matter how often my feed pings.

  2. Greetings Jay,

    I think this is the article you’re referring to:

    http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/09/11/google-may-add-comment-feature-on-shared-reader-feeds/

    I don’t see anything wrong with adding comments to shared Google Reader items and then re-sharing the commented item. Republishing a shared feed on a website is another story, I believe.

    I think the key to this is changing the way we think about content. I write my content in a database. It happens to appear on my website. It also appears in Google Reader (via FeedBurner). For some people, it appears in email (via FeedBlitz). I think that as long as it’s clearly labeled and linked as my content, I don’t really care where or how it appears.

    Regards,
    Erik

  3. Erik,

    Did you see the recent Techcrunch post about Google Shared Reader- they’re thinking about allowing comments on the shared items, effectively making “pirate” versions of blogs and “stealing” readers.

    Question- is the answer here “don’t do it Google” or “please also help us aggregate the comments”. I wouldn’t care who hosts my content if people could see the same interactions with it everywhere the content appears. I think.

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