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Stop Me Before I Link Again
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TicketMaster is suing
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Sidewalk--Microsoft's online city guide--for linking to its Web site. A
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half-dozen big media companies have targeted TotalNEWS with a lawsuit because,
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they say, the site is using Web technology to steal their content. Suddenly,
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the ease of linking from Web site to Web site, which makes the World Wide Web
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so useful, is generating lawsuits that cloud the right to link.
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A world
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of interconnected information, where readers jump from one document to another,
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was first envisioned by engineer Vannevar Bush in 1945. His whirling system of
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motors, levers, and microfilm is to the Web what Leonardo da Vinci's
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helicopters are to the Chinook CH-47. But you get the idea. Bush disciple Ted
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Nelson took the idea to the world of digital computers in 1962, calling his
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creation "hypermedia" and dubbing these jumping points "hyperlinks." One early
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commercial hypermedia product was HyperCard, released with the Macintosh
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computer in 1987. HyperCard allows users to link "stacks" of information
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they've written or assembled on computer "notecards." But the true promise of
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hypermedia was linking information across a global network, and that had to
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wait until 1992 and Tim Berners-Lee's invention of the World Wide Web.
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The Web's rapid acceptance owes much to the ease with which
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Web pages can be created. And the proliferation of the lawsuits owes much to
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the ease with which Web pages can be linked to one another. Creating links is
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easy because each Web page, and each image on the page, has a unique address on
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the Web called a URL (Universal Resource Locator). For instance, the URL for
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this page is http://www.slate.com/webhead/97-06-06/webhead.asp.
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To see how this all works,
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follow me as I build a Web site containing home page A and image B.
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A browser loading home page A
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sees that it refers to image B and loads that too, then displays the whole
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thing.
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The great thing about this scheme is that if
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you are on a slow connection to the Internet, you can tell your browser to
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ignore the images. This speeds things up quite a bit (click to find out
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how).
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The bad thing about this
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scheme is that since every image has a public URL, anyone can use it. In the
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example below, some villain has co-opted image B for his nefarious (and
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libelous) ends.
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The offending page doesn't technically copy or distribute
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the image in question. It just points the user's browser to address B. Some
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lawyers think that this may constitute a "public display," similar to illegally
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publishing a copyrighted photograph in a newspaper, but this argument remains
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untested.
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Interestingly, if the page simply provides a hyperlink to the image in
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question, the law becomes even murkier. Entertain, for a moment, this scenario:
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If we at Slate captured your voicemail recording and played it on our site
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without your permission, some lawyers would say that we had violated your
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copyright. But if we cited your telephone number instead, we wouldn't be
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violating copyright laws--even though Web surfers could hear the same recording
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by dialing the number. Hyperlinks are like telephone numbers--but instead of
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dialing them, you click on them.
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The TicketMaster dispute muddles this point
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further. The company is upset not because Sidewalk provided a hyperlink to
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TicketMaster's site, but because Sidewalk provided a hyperlink "deep" into
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TicketMaster's site. What is "deep"? Well, the page you're looking at is
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relatively deep in Slate. To find your way here, you probably typed in Slate's
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home page URL, http://www.slate.com. We showed you today's cover, then our table
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of contents, and you eventually clicked on the "Webhead" link. But if a friend
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gave you the precise URL for this column, you could go directly to it. So, in a
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way, the link to this story is a "deep" hyperlink, because it avoids our home
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page.
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This is
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what Sidewalk did: It recorded the URLs of TicketMaster's transaction pages,
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where you buy tickets for specific shows. It then placed hotlinks to these URLs
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on its own pages that hype various concerts and theatrical productions. This
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angered TicketMaster because it allowed potential purchasers of tickets to
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avoid ads and promotions on TicketMaster's home page and all the intermediate
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pages you must visit before you can buy a ticket. Returning to my voicemail
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analogy, it's as if I cited not only your telephone number, but also the code
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to skip your clever message (hint: on most voicemail systems, press "#"). While
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this may not be friendly, it doesn't seem like a violation of
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intellectual-property law.
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While the lawsuit proceeds, TicketMaster and Sidewalk have
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exchanged some entertaining technological volleys. Click for a brief account of
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these.
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Just as a Web page can
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include an image by citing that image's URL, so also can it include another Web
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page by citing that page's address. This technique is called "framing." I
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framed pages in my last Webhead to compare search results from various search services.
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Slate's lawyer tells me this sort of framing doesn't violate anyone's copyright
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(phew!). It's called "fair use," and is comparable to the quotation of a short
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passage of a book in a review.
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So why did the news sites sue
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TotalNEWS? See for yourself. When you click to TotalNEWS, a column of icons for
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several news sites appears down the left side of the page. If you click, say,
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USA Today , up pops the USA Today Web site, but inside a frame.
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TotalNEWS' advertisement remains visible. This definitely isn't "fair use." If
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courts decide that such framing constitutes a "public display," or even that it
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causes confusion in the market ("unfair competition"), then TotalNEWS is
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violating intellectual-property law.
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As we go to press, TotalNEWS
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has settled out of court. For details, see this June 6 Wired
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News story.
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