Author Archives: Oliver Luft

About Oliver Luft

Oliver Luft was news editor of Journalism.co.uk from 2006-8.

ACAP answers its critics

The ACAP project launched in November with the hope of being the technological solution to end clashes between news publishers and search engine over content use.

In addition to the back-slapping and the pomp, the launch brought with it hefty criticism of the new system.

The team behind the project has now attempted to satisfy some of the criticism thrown its way by responding to what it considers the main thrust of the argument against it.

Here is a summary of the main critisms ACAP has singled out and its responses (full list):

Criticism: “Publishers should not be allowed to control their content”

Response: Well, you would hardly expect us to agree with this…

“This is simply a way for publishers to “lock up” their content”

…Publishers who implement ACAP will have the confidence to make content available much more widely than is currently the case. Few would condone stealing a pile of newspapers from a newsstand and giving them away to passers-by for free, yet, there are those who think that this behaviour is completely acceptable – indeed normal – in the online environment…

“Robots.txt works perfectly well”

…We recognise that robots.txt is a well-established method for communication between content owners and crawler operators. This is why, at the request of the search engines, we worked to extend the Robots Exclusion Protocol not to replace it (although this posed us substantial problems)… ACAP provides a standard mechanism for expressing conditional access which is what is now required. At the beginning of the project, search engines made it clear that ACAP should be based on robots.txt. ACAP therefore works smoothly with the existing robots.txt protocol…

“This is just about money for publishers”

No: but no one would deny that it is partly about money.

Publishers are not ashamed about making money out of publishing – that is their business…Business models are changing, and publishers need a tool that is flexible and extensible as new business models arise. ACAP will be entirely agnostic with respect to business models, but will ensure that content owners can adopt the business model of their choice…

“The big search engines aren’t involved so don’t waste your time”

Major search engines are involved in the project. Exalead, the world’s fourth largest search engine has been a full participant in the project.

Any lack of public endorsement by the major search engines has not meant a lack of involvement – indeed, quite the opposite…

Guardian: Mail website has most overseas users

ComScore has collated figures that suggest foreign visitors outnumber UK readers on several of the UK’s leading news websites.

According to the Guardian, the Daily Mail leads the way with the most overseas users with 69 per cent coming from outside these shores.

Just over half Telegraph.co.uk users (57 per cent) were from outside the UK, a similar figure to Guardian Unlimited (56 per cent) and Times Online (55 per cent).

BBC Editors: Newsbeat gets website revamp

BBC Radio One’s Newsbeat programme has gone all interactive with the overhaul of its website.

“We’re not trying to replicate other BBC news websites: there is more emphasis on music news,” said editor Rod McKenzie on the BBC Editor’s blog.

“It’s all about visualising our journalism,” he adds. Plenty of vids and pics then.

How do: MEN Media gets Adlink to handle digital sales

MEN Media has ended its relationship with Ad2one, swapping to Adlink for digital sales across its 23 regional and local websites in the North West of England.

The group’s head of digital sales, Peter Boler, told How Do that the relationship was now – as of yesterday – up and running.

Telegraph to offer open OpenID

Shane Richmond is claiming a first for telegraph.co.uk, saying that from the end of next month it will become the first newspaper in the world to provide OpenID to its readers.

OpenID is a technology that allows people to carry the same user names across several different websites, thus removing the tiresome process of having to log-in 137 times each day and remember the plethora of necessary passwords.

OpenID claims are over 160-million OpenID enabled URIs with nearly 10,000 sites supporting its logins.

The system is growing in popularity with publishers. AOL and Microsoft are amongst a host of other using it. At the very basic level for them it means less time having to vet and manage user accounts, as well as removing a barrier to a greater level of interaction with users. Svetainės, teisiniai, finansiniai, techniniai, medicininių tekstų ir kiti vertimai https://skrivanek.lt/vertimu-sritys/medicina-farmacija-ir-klinikiniai-tyrimai/

However, some users may be put off by by the security issue of effectively placing all eggs in one basket.

Plenty more innovation expected from the Tel in 2008, adds Mr Richmond:

“I could describe this as the biggest development of 2008 but I won’t. I know what else we’ve got planned.”

NTY: Belgium papers could sue EU for linking to stories

A victory in a European court last year against Google has encouraged newspapers in Belgium to take action against the European Commission over links on two agency sites.

According to the Times, a Brussels court has been asked by a group of French- and German-language newspapers to examine its claim.