Saturday, June 29, 2013

Understanding Search Engines: Legal Perspective on Liability in the ...

technology-internet-law1In the early 1990s, the proliferation of information available on the Internet and the growth of Internet-related businesses produced new challenges for the distribution and dissemination of information. As legal issues arise from widespread use of search engines, governments react by attempting to regulate the Internet sector.

The search engine operators? growing market power and ability to control access to information trigger new legal concerns encompassing data protection, trademark and copyright infringement consumer protection, competition law, and free speech.

Both search engines and Internet-related businesses are influential factors shaping policies and laws in emerging market economies. Turkey, as an emerging market economy, is particularly concerned with search engine liability in the development of Internet laws.

Search engines are unmistakably Internet-based operations. Internet-based laws for content providers, hosting providers, and online business operators, however, can be challenging to apply to search engines. Search engines are distinct from these other operations in both objective and technology, which requires courts and legislatures to address legal issues related to search engines from a different perspective. The following cases and regulations demonstrate the pervasive search engine issues transcending jurisdictional boundaries.

American courts have addressed a significant number of claims against search engines and have developed extensive jurisprudence on search engine liability, particularly related to intellectual property disputes and defamation.

Perfect 10 v. Google involved an intellectual property conflict over a search engine?s capacity to assemble, organize, store, access, and display intellectual-property-protected ?content.? The plaintiff, Perfect 10, published a magazine and operated a subscription website; it registered the images it used with the United States Copyright Office. The court while analyzing available precedents, clearly distinguished between ?display? and ?inline linking? which refers to use of a linked object, often an image, from one site by a web page belonging to a second site. The court held that Google did not infringe Perfect 10?s right to distribution since infringement required ?actual dissemination? of the copyrighted material rather than simply facilitating access.

In Field v. Google, Blake Field filed a copyright infringement claim against Google Inc. for allowing Internet users to access copies of 51 of his registered works, which violated Field?s exclusive right to reproduce copies and distribute copies of those works. The court held in favor of Google, noting that

?If Google copies or distributes Field?s copyrighted works by allowing access to them through ?cached? links; Google?s conduct is fair use of those works as a matter of law.?

Courts in the United Kingdom addressed Internet law related to search engines similar to the United States. In 2009, Metropolitan International Schools Limited brought a defamation case against Designtechnica Corporation, Google UK Limited, and Google Inc ([2011] WLR 1743). The case provided a rational basis for apportioning liability for online actions, and serves as a foundation for future cases addressing Internet activity and search engines. The court held that a search engine is ?a different kind of Internet intermediary? which prevented the search engine from exercising complete control over the search terms and search results, making it a facilitator rather than a publisher. ?Mr Justice Eady clearly stated that the significance of notification to the proprietor of a search engine merits attention and in that regard, Google was not in a position to ?take down? the offending words in the way that Metropolitan could have done.

In civil law countries, court decisions relating to search engines do not retain the same authority as in common law countries. There are, however, a few notable court decisions in Europe that demonstrate a comprehensive appreciation for the limits of search engine liability. In Palomo v. Google Inc., Spain?s Court of First Instance heard a complaint regarding search result hyperlinks to websites with defamatory content. The court rejected the claim and held that the search engine was not liable for disseminating third party content. The court?s rationale was that the search engine was unaware that the linked content was defamatory.

The legal framework regulating Internet law in Turkey is not as developed as other jurisdictions.

The growing number of Internet related issues, however, requires Turkey to evaluate its existing laws and address legal liability issues regarding search engine conduct. The Information and Communications Technologies Authority is the regulatory body addressing Internet-based issues under Law No. 5651 on the Regulation of Broadcasts via Internet and Prevention of Crimes Committed Through Such Broadcasts (?Law No. 5651?). Law No. 5651?s purpose is to regulate the obligations and responsibilities of content providers, hosting providers, access providers, and mass use providers.

The position of search engines is questionable within the various categories of Internet actors enumerated under Law No. 5651. Attempts to categorize search engines as content providers, hosting providers, or access providers fail to incorporate the nuances of search engine functions. An ?access provider? provides a user with access to the Internet. A ?content provider? creates, amends, or provides information and data to Internet users. A ?hosting provider? operates the system that contains services and content. Based on the key terms defined in Law No. 5651, however, search engines do not fall within the scope of an ?access provider,? a ?hosting provider,? or a ?content provider.?

Problems ensue when legal authorities apply legal rules that are not developed to address and fulfill content removal requests. Websites and their content listed among search results are created by and uploaded by third parties; websites are owned by third parties, not the search engine operator, which makes it legally and technically impossible for search engine operators to interfere with the content. The relevant content must be removed from the original website for the content to avoid the search engine?s algorithmic formulae. The impossibility and illegality, however, does not prevent claims from being filed for non-removal of certain content from search engine results.

Another recurring issue includes requests to ban specific word searches and remove particular content from a search result. Search engine operators can neither prohibit users from using specific search terms, nor can they remove the search results related to these search terms. The existing legal rules for content and host providers are typically suggested to clarify boundaries for search engine liability, since the liability of these Internet actors is clearer.

Under Turkish law a ?content provider is responsible for any kind of content it presents on the Internet? but it is not responsible for the content of third party links unless the content provider indicates its intent to provide access to the specific third party content. Law No. 5651 establishes that the content provider is responsible for content broadcasted on the Internet rather than the hosting provider. This provision should be extended to content listed among the search engine results. Since the legislature is not holding the hosting provider responsible for uploaded content, it should not be legally possible to hold a search engine operator liable for listing live content and providing organized information to users. Even if it was legally and technically possible to remove live content from search engine results, it would not be ?deleted? from the Internet because it would still be broadcast on the relevant website. Criminal and civil liability would rest with the content provider under the scope of Law No. 5651.

However, Turkish courts in practice have nevertheless held Google liable, as a search engine operator, for removing live contents appearing on its search results. The line of thought adopted by the Turkish judges was that the respective content appearing among Google?s search term results was violating the complainant?s personal rights and was accessible; hence the courts ordered that such content be removed by Google from its search results. This line of reasoning may be criticized for equating a search engine?s obligations with those of the content providers? and hosting providers?, as Law No. 5651 clearly states that any person who claims that his rights are violated due to content shall apply to the content provider, or to the hosting provider in cases where the content provider is not found, for removal of such content.

Although no specific regulation exists for content removal from search engine results, Law No. 5651 establishes a procedure for content removal by a content provider or host provider that could be applied to search engines. Search engine operators could potentially be liable for content removed from the original website but still appearing among search results under Article 9 of Law No. 5651.

Another topic of interest that is increasingly coming to the fore to mold how liability may or may not be attributed to search engines for online content is that of search-term suggestions. Search-term suggestion (or the ?Keyword Suggestion Tool? as Google phrases) is a function of a search engine whereby a word, phrase or a website name, when typed to the search engine?s search bar, presents a list of keywords and phrases that the relevant search engine most closely relates them to the typed search-term due to frequency of search or popularity of search of the relevant term.

A 2010 decision of the Turkish criminal court of peace provides an important precedent in regards to how Turkish courts should interpret and apply the provisions of Law No. 5651 in terms of search term suggestions, in Turkey?s nascent Internet law framework. The court held that Google cannot be held responsible for search-term suggestions appearing on its search engine when the search term ?recep konuk corruption? and ?recep konuk?s corruptions? appear. The court reasoned that what is being requested for removal is the search term suggestions and not content as understood by Law No. 5651. The court premised its reasoning as follows:

?The removal of content which is reached through these search results can be requested from the content provider in accordance with the Law No. 5651. ? [T]he obligations of the access providers are within the context of Article 6 and the request should be made to the access provider.?

Although directing the request to the access provider is not the correct procedure, the court issued an interesting decision which might be used as supporting precedent in similar removal requests for search term suggestions, as the court grants that search terms suggestions are not considered content as understood under Law No. 5651.

The role and status of search engines might continue to raise legal concerns for emerging markets, such as Turkey, considering that there is an insufficient amount of case law to shed light into how legislation is interpreted by judicial authorities. This is in part due to the young age of the Internet legislation that is in force, and also due to the lack of judicial know-how concerning matters pertaining to the Internet law vista.

The first step to eliminate such legal concerns would be the recognition that search engine operators are not responsible for the content appearing among search results. This entails a parallel understanding that search engine operators, such as Google, cannot be held responsible for unlawful content that is broadcasted on the Internet, by third parties, when such content is still live. On the other hand, search engine operators may face the risk of being held liable for unlawful content which has been already removed by the content providers, but is still appearing among a particular search engine result. Depending on various court practices, this may impose upon search engine providers the duty to take the necessary technical and legal precautions to remove such content from appearing among their search results when these contents are not live. Second, legal definitions that clearly define and set the boundaries for what types of providers are held responsible for the content broadcasted on the Internet are necessary for the letter of the law to converge with the spirit of the law. Defining search engine operators separate from content and hosting providers is an opportunity for emerging markets to harmonize with courts across the globe in recognizing that search engines are an ?intermediary? to the information on the Internet.

G?nen? G?rkaynak is a partner at ELIG, Attorneys at Law, Istanbul

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Source: http://inforrm.wordpress.com/2013/06/28/understanding-search-engines-legal-perspective-on-liability-in-the-internet-law-vista-gonenc-gurkaynak/

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Oil little changed, natural gas steady above $4

NEW YORK (AP) ? The price of oil was little changed Thursday, while natural gas was steady a day after closing above $4 for the first time in a year and a half.

In morning trading in New York, benchmark oil for May delivery was up 12 cents to $96.70 a barrel. Oil has gained more than $4 in less than a week, driven by signs of strength in the U.S. economy.

Natural gas futures were unchanged. Wednesday's close at $4.07 per 1,000 cubic feet was the first above $4 since Sept. 14, 2011.

There are signs the U.S. is whittling away at the glut of supply that built up over the past few years and pushed natural gas prices down to 10-year lows. Data released by the Energy Department Thursday show inventories are about 27 percent below year-ago levels, although still about 4 percent above the five-year average.

The oil market was tempered by caution as Cypriot banks reopened for the first time since March 16. The banks were shut as political leaders negotiated an emergency bailout to prevent a banking collapse. The contentious deal reached Monday will force losses on bigger depositors, which many analysts have said could spark a crisis of confidence in banking across the 17 countries that use the euro.

No disturbances were reported as people across Cyprus formed long but orderly lines at ATMs and banks.

Brent crude, used to price many kinds of oil imported by U.S. refineries, was down 31 cents to $109.38 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

In other energy futures trading on the Nymex:

? Wholesale gasoline fell 1 cent to $3.10 a gallon.

? Heating oil was flat at $3.04 a gallon.

___

Pamela Sampson in Bangkok and Pablo Gorondi in Budapest contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oil-little-changed-natural-gas-steady-above-4-151551022--finance.html

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Radar reveals traces of Martian mega-flood

NASA / MOLA / Smithsonian

Mars' 600-mile Marte Vallis channel system is filled with young lavas that obscure the source of the channels. This map shows Marte Vallis against the background of an elevation map of the planet, based on readings from the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter on NASA's Mars Global Surveyor.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

A 3-D reconstruction of structures beneath the surface of Mars shows the 600-mile-wide footprint of a mega-flood that carved deep channels into the planet within the past 500 million years, scientists say.

Since that time, the evidence of the flood in a region known as Marte Vallis has been covered over by fresher lava flows. But a team of researchers pieced together the evidence by analyzing readings from a ground-penetrating radar instrument aboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The analysis was laid out Thursday on the journal Science's website.


"Our findings show that the scale of erosion was previously underestimated, and that channel depth was at least twice that of previous approximations," lead author Gareth Morgan, a geologist at the Smithsonian Institution's Center for Earth and Planetary Studies, said in a news release. "The source of the floodwaters suggests?they originated from a deep groundwater reservoir and may have been released by local tectonic or volcanic activity. This work demonstrates the importance of orbital sounding radar in understanding how water has shaped the surface of Mars."

Over the past decade and a half, missions to Mars have provided ample evidence that the planet was once warmer and wetter than it is today. However, scientists say the most recent outflows of water came in brief, catastrophic bursts rather than as steady streams. The newly published research is consistent with that view.

Morgan and his colleagues used the orbiter's Italian-built Shallow Radar sounder, or SHARAD, to put Mars' subsurface geology through the radar equivalent of a CT scan. They found that the boundaries between the layers of fresher lava and the underlying rock traced a network of buried channels. The patterns and depths of those channels were characteristic of the canyons that would be cut by flowing water. Lots of flowing water.

The depth of the main channel was estimated at 226 to 371 feet (69 to 113 meters). "This is comparable with the depth of incision of the largest known megaflood on Earth, the Missoula floods, responsible for carving the Channeled Scabland of the northwestern United States," the researchers wrote.?

The Missoula floods occurred 12,000 to 18,000 years ago, due to a post-Ice Age warming trend, and discharged dammed-up water at a rate ranging up to 2.6 billion gallons per second. Morgan and his colleagues traced the Martian mega-flood to a radically different type of source: a fracture system in Mars' Cerberus Fossae region that apparently opened up to release water from miles beneath the Red Planet's surface. "It was a big crack in the ground, basically," Morgan told NBC News.

Smithsonian / NASA / JPL-Caltech / Sapienza Univ. of Rome / MOLA / USGS

A 3-D visualization shows the buried Marte Vallis channels. Marte Vallis consists of multiple perched channels formed around streamlined islands. These channels feed a deeper and wider main channel. The surface has been elevated and scaled by a factor of 1/100 for clarity. The area covered by this visualization is outlined by dotted lines in the global map above.

NASA / Goddard / Anna Brunner

NASA interns look down on Frenchman Springs Coulee in Washington state's Channeled Scablands. Researchers say the Martian mega-flood cut channels similar to those created thousands of years ago in the Channeled Scablands.

SHARAD's depth readings suggest that the channels had to have been cut somewhere between 10 million and 500 million years ago. Morgan said that makes the mega-flood channels "much younger" than the geological features being studied by NASA's Curiosity rover in a different region of Mars. Curiosity's science team wants to find out whether Mars had liquid water and the other conditions conducive for life 3 billion years to 4 billion years ago. On the surface, at least, those conditions were long gone by the time the Cerberus Fossae mega-flood washed over Marte Vallis.

More about Mars:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/07/17225462-radar-reveals-traces-of-monstrous-martian-flood-millions-of-years-ago?lite

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Apple's Tim Cook Met With Beats To Talk About The Company's ...

Apple CEO Tim Cook met with Beats Electronics CEO Jimmy Iovine in L.A. in late February, according to a report from Reuters today. The news comes just as Beats project ?Daisy,? a streaming music service built by Beats, is being spun off as a separate company by the audio electronics maker, with the help of a $60 million investment round. Apple was interested in Daisy, including its business plan and rollout, Reuters said.

Apple?s Eddy Cue, who is in charge of Internet Software and Services at the company (including the iTunes Store, iCloud and more) also attended the meeting, according to the report. It was an ?information? gathering meeting, Reuters? source says, with the intent of finding out how project Daisy plans to stand apart from Spotify, Pandora, Rdio and others. Iovine had previously said in an interview with AllThingsD that he?d pitched a streaming music service to then-CEO Steve Jobs back in 2003, but that Jobs wanted to wait to get record companies to lower their licensing fees.

Daisy is set to launch toward the end of 2013, according to a press release issued yesterday documenting the company?s spin-off from Beats. The company has some strong industry backing, including the involvement of Dr. Dre, Jimmy Iovine, Trent Reznor and CEO Ian Rogers. It?ll benefit from Beats??acquisition?of music streaming service MOG, which was purchased in 2012 for $14 million, too. All these and the sizeable initial funding should make Daisy a strong competitor for existing services like Pandora and Spotify out of the gate.

For Apple, it sounds on the surface like this was little more than a fact-finding mission. The iPhone-maker has been rumored to have been developing its own streaming music service for years now, and its recent moves with iCloud and iTunes Match seem to indicate it sees the value in streaming media. Digital music sales (of which iTunes makes up the lion?s share) also grew this year for the first time since 1999, with Apple accounting for?around?60 percent of those, so the company is hardly at a do-or-die when it comes to streaming music services.

There are reports that Google is looking to do something with a Spotify-style streaming service via YouTube, which itself could prompt Apple to look harder at the idea, and might help explain why it wanted to set up a meet with Beats so quickly following Daisy?s initial reveal.

Apple could be feeling out Daisy to see if it makes sense as an acquisition target ? Cook freely admitted back in February that Apple?s acquisition strategy could extend to larger companies with more complete product offerings, but in general, he said it?s about?finding?the talent needed to push Apple?s own projects forwards. There?s also the possibility that Apple will go the way of forming a formal partnership with a single provider, but that would be tricky in the long run in terms of working out a revenue arrangement that satisfies all involved. It would get around the big problem around outright acquisition of a streaming service, however, as licensing deals often don?t come along with other company assets in those situations.

It?s early to draw any conclusions from this meeting, beyond the simple one that Apple is very keen on the streaming music space and paying close attention to major news in that area. Not everyone gets a visit from Apple?s CEO and the man in charge of its digital media storefronts, after all, a pair that you can be sure does very little without specific intent.


Beats Electronics, a company best known for its Beats by Dr. Dre line of headphones.

? Learn more

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/03/06/apples-tim-cook-met-with-beats-to-talk-about-the-companys-new-daisy-streaming-music-service/

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Charlene Obernauer: Hate the Fare Hike? Act Now to Stop Another in 2015

Transit riders are feeling the pinch of the recent MTA fare hike and are looking for someone to blame. Some are pointing their fingers at MTA executives for their $250,000+ salaries; others are blaming transit workers, who earn an honest living of around $60,000 a year. Riders' anxiety is understandable, as fare hikes cost $200 every year and there's no end in sight.

Since the recession hit, the MTA raised the fares four times. The first was in 2008 to match the rate of inflation with a 3.9 percent hike. The MTA has been taking out loans for years to pay for expansion projects and other capital investments. But just like a credit card bill, debt eventually needs to be paid off. And in the MTA's case, their debt service has a balloon-type borrowing program that goes up every year. The big banks -- you know, the folks who caused the recession -- got bailed out by the Federal Government with 0 percent interest loans.

But the MTA is busting its budget to pay off their debt, which is about 17 percent of its general operating expenses, with interest rates at about 4.5 percent. As the MTA's debt continues to increase, so do the fares, with the last two hikes coming in at three times the rate of inflation. If the big banks can get zero interest loans from the Federal Government, can't the publicly subsidized MTA get a better deal?

All across the country, cities and transit authorities are suing big banks because of their manipulation of LIBOR, or the London interbank rate, which has been the standard for determining lending rates for millions of loans. The MTA could do the same, renegotiate a better interest rate, and stop allocating so much of its budget every year to paying off their debt.

Meanwhile, transit advocates are calling on the state and city to fork up more money for public transit, as they've been systematically defunding the MTA since the mid-1990s. Despite recent fare hikes, Governor Andrew Cuomo's 2013 budget diverted $20 million from the MTA, and New York City is allocating just $160 million per year towards the MTA's budget--which is less than Mayor Koch allocated in the late '80s. A fair investment from both the city and state would significantly lessen the rider's burden of rising transit costs.

Finally, the Transportation Infrastructure Bond Act, which would repair existing road and bridge infrastructure and invest $770 million in the MTA's five-year capital plan, has been introduced in the New York State Assembly. Not only could the bill create good jobs, but it would be a boost to the economy.

None of these solutions are going to be easy wins, and none of them are going to be complete fixes. But we can't scapegoat the honest salaries and earned benefits of hardworking people. And we can't let the right-wing use these recent fare hikes as an opportunity to privatize public transit, which will just lead to more fare hikes and service cuts. Instead, let's focus our energy on advocating for an affordable and equitable mass transit system, because if we want to prevent fare hikes in 2015, we need to start now.

?

Follow Charlene Obernauer on Twitter: www.twitter.com/charlene_amber

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/charlene-obernauer/mta-fare-hike_b_2804027.html

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St. Mark's finishes winter sports season on a high note

by susan on March 6, 2013

Post image for St. Mark?s finishes winter sports season on a high note

Above: St. Mark?s boys hockey celebrated a big win over Groton to cap off their season
(contributed photo)

St. Mark?s wrapped up its winter sports season last month with five wins over rival Groton. The school sent along this recap of the victories:

On February 23, St. Mark?s traveled to Groton to play six games, and the Lions defeated the Zebras in five of them. During the winter season, St. Mark?s went 8-6-1 against Groton.

Varsity boys? basketball defeated Groton 54-40 on Saturday, finishing the year with a record of 11-9, for the 16th consecutive winning season for the program. The St. Mark?s Varsity girls? basketball team also won against Groton by a score of 52-41, earning their first ISL win of the season. JV girls? basketball dominated their hosts 31-12, while JV boys? basketball suffered the only loss of the afternoon: a close 32-39 thriller. Varsity girls? ice hockey also was victorious, shutting out Groton 3-0.

The most exciting win came fromVarsity boys? ice hockey, scoring two goals in the final minute of play to take home a 4-3 win. The Lions defeated Groton in an earlier game this season. Earlier in the month, 3rds boys? basketball, JV girls? hockey, and 3rds girls? squash all registered victories over Groton to cap their respective winning campaigns.

Highlights:

  • 3rds boys? basketball, win over Groton
  • Varsity girls? hockey, 3-0 win over Groton
  • JV girls? hockey, 4-2 win over Brooks
  • Varsity boys? hockey, 4-1 win over St. George?s; 4-3 win over Groton
  • JV boys? hockey, 4-2 win over Tabor
  • Varsity girls? basketball, 52-41 win over Groton
  • JV girls? basketball, win over Groton
  • Varsity boys? basketball, win over Groton
  • JV boys? basketball, 53-50 win over Brooks
  • JV girls? squash, 5-2 win over Pomfret

Source: http://www.mysouthborough.com/2013/03/06/st-marks-finishes-winter-sports-season-on-a-high-note/

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Slickdeals' best in tech for March 6th: Canon EOS Rebel T4i and 3TB Seagate external hard drive

Looking to save some coin on your tech purchases? Of course you are! In this round-up, we'll run down a list of the freshest frugal buys, hand-picked with the help of the folks at Slickdeals. You'll want to act fast, though, as many of these offerings won't stick around long.

Slickdeals' best in tech for March 6th: Canon Rebel T4i and 3TB Seagate external hard drive

If you've been looking to splurge for a DSLR, today's list may have something for you. A Canon EOS Rebel T4i tops today's roundup and a 3TB Seagate Expansion hard drive tags along to store all of those upcoming snapshots. Take the leap past the break to see the rest, but if you hold out too long, these discounts could disappear.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/06/slickdeals-best-in-tech-for-march-6th/

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