AP Fighting to Reclaim Revenue From Web Portals
At its annual meeting today, Associated Press board of directors outlined plans to fight back against online portals and news aggregators that post news content without paying licensing fees to the AP and its member newspapers.
"We can no longer stand by and watch others walk off with our work under misguided legal theories," AP Chairman Dean Singleton said at the group's meeting in San Diego. "We are mad as hell, and we are not going to take it any more."
The reality is that the online advertising economy has treated the aggregators pretty well, while the newspaper industry has been leaking money like a sieve.
So the AP, a cooperative owned collectively by its roughly 1,500 newspaper members, is fighting back. The board, whose members include prominent newspaper executives like the chief executives of Gannett, McClatchy and Tribune, said it plans file suit against Web sites that publish AP content without proper licensing fees. Without naming Google or any others by name, Singleton said that the AP plans to work with portals and aggregators who legally license its content, and "to seek legal and legislative remedies against those who don't."