NP Rank:
AP Violates Own Copyright Law By Quoting 22 Words from TechCrunch
Well, this was bound to happen sooner or later. After the Associated Press issued its preposterous decision to charge for 5 word quotations of its stories, the blogosphere was quick to react.
Now, the tables have been turned on the Associated Press, as internet news superblog TechCrunch (who have called on fellow bloggers to ban all AP content), is 'demanding justice' after the AP quoted a hefty 22 words from one of its posts.
Let the battle rage on, and on, and on, my friends.
You gotta fight / for your right / to copyright!
As far as I can tell, the Associated Press is sticking by its ridiculous and unlawful assertionthat “direct quotations, even short ones” are copyright infringements and result in lawsuit threats and DMCA takedown notices.
This story led us to ban the A.P., call the New York Times out on undisclosed conflicts of interest and begin to investigate some ridiculous organization called the Media Bloggers Association before getting bored and wandering off to other topics.
But now the A.P. has gone too far. They’ve quoted twenty-two words from one of our posts, in clear violation of their warped interpretation of copyright law. The offending quote, from this post, is here
(I’m suspending my A.P. ban to report on this important story).
Am I being ridiculous? Absolutely. But the point is to illustrate that the A.P. is taking an absurd and indefensible position, too. So I’ve called my lawyers (really) and have asked them to deliver a DMCA takedown demand to the A.P. And I will also be sending them a bill for $12.50 with that letter, which is exactly what the A.P. would have charged me
if I published a 22 word quote from one of their articles.
Next time, A.P., ask permission before you quote me. I work hard to create content, and it just isn’t appropriate for you to simply cut and paste it into your own product and then sell that to others.





Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (10)
at 14:16 on June 19th, 2008
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.
How the tables have turned....
at 14:26 on June 19th, 2008
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 14:34 on June 19th, 2008
Hey, Jarrett, I posted a storylink earlier from the Times-Picayune, but since it originally came from AP, I only used a 4 word quote. Do you think that's good enuff?
at 14:50 on June 19th, 2008
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff. Jarrett, do I need to remove AP quotes off all my stories or do we have a deal with them. Also if we do have a deal, how much can we use? I am with Tech Crunch, Not going to use them on my blogs or website
at 17:06 on June 19th, 2008
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story as it reveals the contradiction in AP copyright law. It's good stuff.
at 18:05 on June 19th, 2008
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 19:52 on June 19th, 2008
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 01:51 on June 20th, 2008
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 05:53 on June 20th, 2008
Give 'em enough rope...
at 04:20 on April 23rd, 2009
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.