Questions

How to avoid Copyright issues for news aggregation site/app?

I have an idea for a news aggregation app/site with typical features like saving articles for offline reading, organizing them etc, as well as a unique feature that I am experimenting right now. What are the ways to avoid any copyright issues if I am aggregating news from websites like WSJ, NYT, Reuters, AP etc and displaying the news in my app? Do I have to get any license from them, or can I just use their RSS feed? How much does it usually cost? Its how News360, Flipboard, News Republic display the news article in app, i.e. remove ads from the source's feed/webpage, clean interface. App will be free to users except the unique feature that I just mentioned. I am also very much interested in getting some consultation on call from Clarity.fm experts in this area so let me know in your response if you can provide inputs.

2answers

You don't post the entirety of any article. You link users off to the actual site (or iframe it in even or open a new view on a mobile app with a back button). You cite the source. OpenGraph tags (and other meta tags) are typically fair game for previews and such.

Saving articles for offline use is a bit trickier. So long as you aren't storing their copyrighted material on your server you might be ok. There are, after all, tools out there to save offline versions of any web page. Of course they let the user enter a URL and do not lead users to specific pages.

RSS feeds are also typically ok. If you look, many sites have a policy posted about how you can use their RSS feeds. Some sites even put ads in their RSS feeds. I wouldn't alter anyone's RSS feed. They want those ads syndicated. You might have problems there. Might.

Ultimately, you are pushing traffic to them. Hopefully. That's kinda how this works. You want to build something that services them and your audience. That way everyone wins and no one has any problems. So even if they might normally say something about copyright issues, they likely won't because they'd be shooting themselves in the foot.

Basically, make it worth their while. Make sure they don't want to say no.


Answered 9 years ago

You are swimming in murky waters. In the USA, there is a "fair copyright law" that lets you publish and use other people's content for educational and critique purposes but if you want to monetize a business using other people's intellectual property, I highly recommend that you consult your legal counsel when you have a clearer definition of your platform and business model. The best way to curate and publish other people's content is to have some kind of royalty or payment agreement with your content source to avoid lawsuits, that are most likely to happen once you start building your brand.


Answered 9 years ago

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