This screencap [1] is from an article from one of the most important newspaper; El Mundo. The article is about how news aggregators arehurting the newspaper industry and that it was high time that the authorities did something. Next to the article there is a widget to share that very same article on Facebook/Twitter/Linked and Meneame[2]. Meneame [3] is the main Spanish news aggreagator, a Digg clone. With this new law the future of all news aggregators in Spain is uncertain.
This is the statement from the creator of Meneame [2], he is considering either closing the site or moving abroad.
The law doesn't only affect linking to newspapers, it also applies to linking to blogs or other sources. You are supposed to pay the tax even when linking to blogs that are not affiliated with the program and that will never receive any money from it.
Under a strict interepretation of this law, HN is illegal in Spain.
Imagine this bill multiplied a thousand times (in various forms) and applied to every industry imaginable, and you start to get an idea of what legislation looks like in southern Europe.
This will most likely be damaging to the newspapers in the long run. The result will be a reduced proliferation of links to the newspapers, which will cause a lower visibility.
It is not the first time this has happened. I can't find a link right now (somebody care to add one?), but a few years ago one of the big news outlets managed to secure a legal ruling that they had some rights over how people linked to their site, and demanded that Google comply with their demands or remove all links to their site.
Google removed all links to their site.
After a few days of receiving no search traffic whatsoever, the company who instigated this surrendered unconditionally and asked Google to put things back how they were originally.
The moral of this story is that Google provides a free service that is of immense value to the people at the other end of the link, and demanding that Google pay you for providing this service is both unreasonable and unwise.
If that were the only consequence, this wouldn't be so problematic. But it makes linking to anything something you have to pay for with the author having no way to opt out. So any time you post a link you have to pay a fee, which is collected by a government agency.
The most effective solution for this issue would be to create some form of online coalition of companies against these type of over-reaching copyright taxes (Google, Bing, Wordpress, Twitter, Facebook, etc.)
If the newspapers that lobbied for this tax are delisted and unable to be linked to, their traffic will plummet and they'll be unable monetize their online presences via ad revenue.
In fact it seems that the spanish newspapers have been oposing this tax. They know that the moment google stops linking to them they'll lose a huge quantity of clicks.
But the gobernment wanted to do it any way because it's how they plan to reciver part of the taxes generated by google revenue in Spain that it's diverted to Ireland and the offshore google conglomerate.
I think it's going to backfire the internet market in Spain, and it's a huge mistake.
Which country DOESN'T do this? I can think of none. The US is one of the worst offenders since they often bypass courts and conduct takedowns without any real oversight (often claiming that they have the right since non-Americans have less rights and the sites are ran from abroad).
Anyway, the way I read your post is that you think international corporations should essentially be above the law. That if you're a nice little local startup that you're subject, but if you're a monster corporation you're not. How does that benefit anyone?
In a way it makes sense, as most of these multinationals do not reside in the countries where the laws are being made. Maybe if they stop doing business there, or it is more difficult, it will give local companies(which pay taxes and provide more jobs locally) and advantage. Not saying that's definitely true, but it is something to think about.
josu|11 years ago
This is the statement from the creator of Meneame [2], he is considering either closing the site or moving abroad.
The law doesn't only affect linking to newspapers, it also applies to linking to blogs or other sources. You are supposed to pay the tax even when linking to blogs that are not affiliated with the program and that will never receive any money from it.
Under a strict interepretation of this law, HN is illegal in Spain.
[1] https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BtPH52DCMAA3Ppk.png
[2] The article and the widget are still there: http://www.elmundo.es/opinion/2014/02/14/52fe8160ca4741d2018...
[3] http://www.meneame.net/
[4] (Google Translated from Spanish) https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=es&tl=en&js=y&prev...
bobcostas55|11 years ago
Taek|11 years ago
asuffield|11 years ago
Google removed all links to their site.
After a few days of receiving no search traffic whatsoever, the company who instigated this surrendered unconditionally and asked Google to put things back how they were originally.
The moral of this story is that Google provides a free service that is of immense value to the people at the other end of the link, and demanding that Google pay you for providing this service is both unreasonable and unwise.
anon4|11 years ago
Dystopian|11 years ago
If the newspapers that lobbied for this tax are delisted and unable to be linked to, their traffic will plummet and they'll be unable monetize their online presences via ad revenue.
omegant|11 years ago
dang|11 years ago
coldcode|11 years ago
Someone1234|11 years ago
Anyway, the way I read your post is that you think international corporations should essentially be above the law. That if you're a nice little local startup that you're subject, but if you're a monster corporation you're not. How does that benefit anyone?
fred_durst|11 years ago
forgotpasswd3x|11 years ago
gress|11 years ago
jahewson|11 years ago
fleitz|11 years ago
cheald|11 years ago