Yahoo/Geocities IP Trouble 221
Doug Muth writes "There's an
article in Wired about Yahoo taking over Geocities and how they now claim to
own the intellectual rights to all webpages that users have on there.
That's scary, since under this contract, anyone who has a page on Geocities no longer has the rights to what they have created. "
It might change (Score:1)
We'd be much better off if we banned lawyers from using computers.
Re:Take it easy! (Score:1)
Their lawyers's aren't stupid and they almost certainly saying a lot of what they should have said in order to come up with an enforcable agreement. The more clauses they insterted the greater their vulnerability in the courts.
Unfortunately, their management should have realized that such a conservative approach wouldn't cut it. They have risked alienating their contributors instead of taking a risk in a lawsuit. Their business would probably be better off if they tried the latter. This frontier of copyright law needs homesteaders!
Re:Boycott Yahoo Home Page (Score:1)
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Station/
I can't believe the nerve of those jerks. I used to have a great deal of respect for them, but that sure has ended abruptly!
I also emailed Yahoo with my complaint.
Re:Take it easy! (Score:1)
What about my own writings? (Score:1)
My questions:
1) What can they do with my writings, can they sell them?
2) Where can I get a free account with about 2 megs of space that does not have any restrictions?
Re:GPL issues (Score:1)
It is also true that you wouldn't be able to post another person's copyrighted material on their servers unless you had the same perpetual sublicensable modification and distribution rights as Yahoo is asking for (same issue, really.. because GPL only allows sublicensing under the terms of the GPL, which are more restrictive than Yahoo's agreement)
Re:It might change - let's be practical! (Score:1)
"Prior consent" is even worse - it means, at the least, that the person sends back a postcard indicating aggrement. Even if nobody gave you a false address, what do you do with people who don't respond? Or who disagree, since this isn't a situation where a quorum decides the issue for everyone?
The only practical solution is to use this clause and honor a extra-legal period where customers can yank their pages if the new terms aren't acceptable. If you don't like the terms, yank your pages *today*. If your pages are still up in two weeks, they can reasonably assume that you do agree to the new terms.
It's not perfect, but it seems better than the alternatives.
Re:I like "pretty dog" sites... (Score:1)
First of all, who says that the web has to be a picture of anybodies brain? It can be more than that. It can be pretty dogs as well. I mean -- why not?!!
Let's all stand up for pretty dogs!
If you'll excuse me, I'm going to go register prettydog.com now. Bye.
Re:I like "pretty dog" sites... (Score:1)
Good HTML? Easy, if you work at it.
"Design"-ing a website. Gotta work a little at it. Anyone can write HTML, but.. can you make it LOOK good.
Content? Hard.
Dynamic Content? Even harder.
After you learn HTML, learn something like ASP or Cold Fusion or PERL-CGI and give your brain a whirl at dynamic stuff. That's a challenge. I find myself after four months of doing dynamic stuff having a hard time coming up with a static webpage. Once you get into a dynamic mode, your brain seems to be like.. oh, wouldn't it be cool if, etc. Static pages just seem boring after having your eyes opened.
Nuff said,
~Sandman
Re:Tripod just as bad (Score:1)
Not true. I deleted my site and asked xoom to delete my account over 3 months ago, but it's still there (just checked).
Re:Expropriation or Promotion? (Score:1)
BTW if you use ICQ, be aware they have the right to parse thru your messages and sell your identity to selected advertisers based on your message content.
Wonderful. Wonderful. (Score:2)
"Oh, how dark my life is.
Let's all embrace the Night.
I wish I were a vampire."
Lucky bastards.
Re:The salvation Army of Web Sites.. (Score:1)
Tripod used to have one that wouldn't close until you used one of the links in it to go to their main page. Until I discovered the "no js, no popup" trick, I didn't go to Tripod sites at all.
Re:Yahoo Forces Users to Violate the GPL! (Score:1)
--
Re:I'm not buying it.... (Score:1)
"I find it ironic that people screaming about their IP rights when their sites are chock full of copyrighted images they scanned in, audio files they recorded off of videos and TV, and often buttons and other images they ripped off of other sites"
I find it insulting that you assume the people screaming about IP rights have been stealing IP themselves. I had a web page on geocities (for over 2 years) with nearly ten meg of drawings, paintings, comics, articles and tutorials, all of which I created myself. (Note I say "had" - I might decide to go back to geocities if they fix up their TOS.)
This may be slightly off topic but . . (Score:1)
14.2. You hereby grant MediaOne and ServiceCo. and hereby represent and warrant that You have all necessary rights to so grant, the
worldwide, royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive right and license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate,
distribute, perform and display all material posted on the public areas of the Road Runner Service via Your account and/or to incorporate
the same in other works in any form, media or technology whether now known or hereafter developed.
If I'm reading this straight it means that anything I post to Mediaone's usenet server becomes their property. I'd think this applies to the web space they offer me too. Can anyone comment?
Re:Yahoo's policy and open source. (Score:1)
Re:I'm not buying it.... (Score:1)
When someone gets a geocities account, they know that geocities/yahoo will advertise on their site... that's the obvious deal.. they do not know, that yahoo is going to take their content, and resell it independantly.
I think yahoo selling a collection of geocities stuff would merit a class action suit..
Yahoo Rights (Score:1)
"By submitting Content to any Yahoo property, you automatically grant, or warrant that the owner of such Content has expressly granted, Yahoo the royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive and fully sublicensable right and license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform and display such Content (in whole or part) worldwide and/or to incorporate it in other works in any form, media, or technology now known or later developed."
Translation: If it is something you came up with: ie. a new song, and idea for a product, some type of code. Yahoo can do whatever it feels like with it, even if that means loss of income or potential income for you.
It does not mean that Yahoo is taking responceability for what you do, but it is a clause so that they can pirate anything you put on your web page.
Warning!!! (Score:2)
And I'm wondering what happens to guys who save their Open Source, Free Software and stuff there...
My 0.02
Re:not quite what you're saying (Score:1)
I have material on Geocities that has been Copyrighted (got my Library of Congress forms and everything). I am in the process of contacting a lawyer. I will keep the community updated.
Yahoo can do what they want with their site...just not with my work.
Bah, lawyers... (Score:1)
Hrmmmm.....
Really, what ever happened to saying "We host your content, we make money off of the ads." Claiming the content is theirs to do with as they please is wrong. Their agreement is more likely to CREATE trouble for yahoo, because with a little bit of wordplay you could say Yahoo owns the content to kiddie-porn on such site and warez on another....
More than anything, I believe what we all should learn from this is that 99% of the lawyers out there are clueless, stupid, selfish people who have no disregard for anyone outside of their client.... Until their client learns that they are screwing over the people that they service.
Re:Rights & Responsibilities (Score:1)
Re:Nothing is free. (Score:1)
Although I recently purchased a domain name from NSI in my view there is not much that is better on the web than Geocities, Fortunecity and other web hosting outfits that give you free pages and without popup adds (boo, Tripod).
As far as Geocities getting the right to sell the content of my pages, good luck to them if they can sell my jottings. I am reminded of the Shakespeare quote, "He who steals my purse, steals trash."
Re:I like "pretty dog" sites... (Score:1)
People have pictures of their family on their desks at work. I would consider putting a picture of my dog here. A web site pursuing that same end is, IMO, nearly the same thing.
Maybe I will throw together a page for my dog when I get home.
-awc
This is why... (Score:1)
A couple weeks ago there was a discussion on
---
Put Hemos through English 101!
Re:No, but... (Score:1)
--
Yahoo! Assumes Ownership Of All Linked Material (Score:1)
We assume ownership of and all rights to material which is linked to from our search engine or database.
Also, a question: Do libraries assume copyright ownership and all intellectual rights to the contents of the books on their shelves? Of course not. There is no reasonable excuse for the need for these insulting clauses popping-up everywhere other than sheer greed and the hope to exploit the material, thoughts, and work of other people without compensation.
Of course, Geocities is, I believe, owned by Microsoft. I'm sure once they were acquired, they quickly learned this lesson of 'take what isn't yours and profit from it'.
I wonder what would happen if you host your site at Yahoo, Geocities, and Tripod? They all assume full ownership of your material. I'd like to see all three fight each other for the right to your content.
---
seumas.com
Re:Contract does NOT revoke your rights... (Score:1)
...but they still have the rights to the content.
So somewhere somebody makes a contract that says: "We get everything, and you get five MB of free web space." Fantastic.
How many other people can't wait for the day when everyone with Linux can host their own fully-capable web site right from their desktop?
You can have all the cgi programs you want, all the mailboxes, all the space, all the bandwidth, etc. That will be really cool.
Just a thought.
Boycott Yahoo Home Page (Score:1)
http://www.sitepowerup.com/toofar.htm
Rights & Responsibilities (Score:2)
not quite what you're saying (Score:2)
if you read the terms and the article in wired real carefully you'll notice that anyhting currently on there does not fall under these guidelines, you just can't modify any of the information on your site. this is still pretty dumb, but at least they're not claiming ownership over things that already exist.
why not sue on labor law grounds? (Score:1)
"The lie, Mr. Mulder, is most convincingly hidden between two truths."
One site already gone (Score:1)
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/8984
So much for free space (now at the low, low cost of ownership of your work).
geocities account (Score:1)
need to go through our re-registration process."
I do not have the option of not using Yahoo's services and just staying with Geocities. I must now join Yahoo in order to edit or, in my case, remove my Geocities page.
If anybody finds a way around this, could they email me here [mailto]?
On a side note, when the internet originally came out, it strongly resembled the laissez-faire model of economics. Now it's starting to resemble a mixed market economy too much - the governemnt supports the big businesses who pay for election funds. Maybe socialism is next with the government regulating everything.. But, on the other hand, I haven't been to Australia lately..
I'm not buying it.... (Score:2)
What if you put an bootleg copy of somebodys song in mp3 on your site, do they own it?? NO WAY!
What if you are talking about a Ford automobile? Do they own the Ford name?
As a contract, you agree to let them put adds on your site, they agree to povide space for a site as long as their adds are allowed to display. Okay, where is the compensation for the content you put up?
Photo magazines have been running contests for years that say all entrys become property of the sponser, but you agree to that in hopes of getting the prize.
GeoCities may be able to repost or redisplay your content, but for them to make a profit on it, mmmm, sounds like it could be LawyerCities to me.
A possible solution (Score:1)
Wow...chain mail with a purpose, who woulda thunk it?
Re:One site already gone (Score:1)
Once again... (Score:1)
A scant few of us (lawyer types) actually can use unix/bsd/linux.
I do not agree with the current state of affairs in the on-line world. The problem is not lawyer domination; rather, it is corporate-lawyer domination.
The internet is evolving into a haven for big-biz,and the little-folks are being converted into commodities.
Lawyers are not evil en toto. We all are happy for our lawyers that do a good job to protect our interests.
In the Geocities cases, there is Geocities represented by Yahoo's lawyers, and the other side (the homesteaders) do not have representation (yet). This presents a power imbalance.
Perhaps a new kind of governmental model may help home users to close the power gap.
Never before have so many average people come into direct or indirect contact with lawyers, contracts, and licenses. There must be a way for these people to learn about and receive advice as to courses of action.
Enter the ICP owned by [a] lawyer/s. (Don't get all pissed off yet...) I know that for most people contact with lawyers is anethema. What if the you had a contract with a lawyer for representation in internet related issues; your website and all it's content was housed on the lawyer's servers; and your email etc was also housed there.
By doing this, you can keep or release as much control over your content as you like. You will be covered by the attorney/client privilege and you can waive that privilege to the extent you like. Even the NSA's own tactics will work for you!
This sounds a little far fetched because lawyers are clueless for the most part about computers. But this model will protect content. Hypothetically the lawyer/ICP could charge minimally for the cost because a large volume of people could be serviced. So exorbitant lawyer fees could be a thing of the past.
Well, it is just a dream. And I AM just a law student... But, I'm thoroughly convinced that if the average user doesn't receive legal representation in their everday meanderings on the net, we will all be owned by corporations and corporate lawyers.
Until then... encrypted everything. Set up VPNs. Think security and ownership in everything you do on the internet.
The day may come when your driver's licence number is the property of X.com...
The salvation Army of Web Sites.. (Score:1)
I say we all start setting up porn and Warez sites now, thousands at a time.. Let's see how fast they change their minds about owning rights to it all..
Take it easy! (Score:4)
has the rights to what they have created. "
It grants yahoo a perpetual, transferable & non-exclusive, sublicensable right to the content. This does not mean that the original author is not free to use or sell their content, though it means that in theory, yahoo, or one of their partners could sell the content themselves.
Second: Yahoo maintains that their intent is not to deprive authors of their rights, but rather to avoid lawsuits in the future. I am inclined to believe them and I think others should take them at their word as well.
This is not to say that people shouldn't complain vociferously to Yahoo about this new policy. It is sufficiently broad that it leaves the door open to future abuse and it needs amendmant.
Unfortunatly, even if they want to do the right thing, there is a long road ahead. This verbiage exists because current copyright conventions are not a good fit for the modern age.
The latest revision of the copyright conventions was supposed to take into account the realities of this modern age, but it is clearly a failure. It may or may not represent the interests of large copyright holders. It clearly fails to represent the interests of small copyright holders and the publising industry that has sprung up around them.
So, instead of antagonizing Yahoo, and their ilk, treat them as allies. They have the resources & economic interest to make a positive change.
An interesting fact (Score:1)
Now that's scary.
Nothing is free. (Score:1)
- A.P.
--
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promotional Ad
Tripod home pages have the same clause in license (Score:1)
-alan
Expropriation or Promotion? (Score:2)
This I suspect is a little too broad for what Yahoo is at the moment (a catalog service). I would argue on an individual level that Yahoo is a publishing house and therefore the only rights that it should receive are a right to reproduce (cache) and republsh (serve web pages to the public). If it is a multimedia studio, then it should at least have the professional courtesy to define the services it is providing to the customers (someone else can argue about the legitimacy of those services).
The scary part is the "technology now known or later developed". This effectively extinguishes all future rights to derivative products. Hypothetically if someone is the next da Vinci who started say a new trendy artform, then Yahoo can put a claim to that. I wonder what law courts would say about implicit contracts imposed by a knowledgeble party to create a lien on future income. Capitalism is one thing but selling out your future life-earnings for a pittance is another!
LL
Re:Miffed. (Score:1)
One for commerce? Almost begs the question "What if we threw a party and nobody came?".... I personally would never want anything to do with junkmailnet
This will change (Score:2)
Yahoo suits have to react in the next day or two. If not, users of geocities who post material that is truly dear to them will start yanking their sites as fast as they can. What will remain will be a bunch of useless wannabe pages, and various picts of grandchildren and dogs.
They shot themselves in the head with this one, lets sit back and watch the power of online communities smack them back into a proper line of thinking. Is anyone else getting a little tired of watching these reactions to bone-headed moves, since we know the outcome will always be to the advantage of the mass of offended people.
the AC
Wow. You really are a moron. (Score:1)
Disturbing
by sophisto (slutty_pants@yourmomshouse.og) on Tuesday June 29, @01:23PM EDT (#)
(User Info) http://www.ungabunga.com
If yahoo get away with stealing users IP, they are in essence stealing the users ID.
I hope that other ISP's don't follow this & create a terrifying trend.
IP in this instance means INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY . Why don't you try reading a little bit more than the title of the article BEFORE POSTING. People like you are the reason I look both ways before crossing a greened intersection.
Catch a ride on the clue train, man. Please don't do this again.
-rah
companies and IP (Score:1)
TC
The Yahoo/Geocities rat trap (Score:1)
The Wired article on the Yahoo/Geocities merger (there's a link to it in this Slashdot story) quoted a professor of intellectual property law, who theorizes that Yahoo is probably most interested in covering their own asses, and that it isn't their intent to hijack large amounts of intellectual property.
Still, reading those new terms of service made me nervous enough that I didn't want to take any chances of losing rights to intellectual property that I've worked hard on. I immediately tried to sign onto ftp.geocities.com to clean out my site, only to find that I was locked out of my ftp account, with a notice to visit the yahoo.geocities.com help page for all the latest info.
I arrive there to find that in order to access my geocities page, I was now required to create a Yahoo account for myself in addition to my existing Geocities account. In order to create a Yahoo account, I first had to agree to the terms of service that I found objectionable to begin with. No thank you!
After several minutes of further searching for a contact email address, I found one (support@geocities.com), and emailed them with a polite request to axe my account, explaining what I found objectionable.
Remember when the Internet used to not suck?
Re:I like "pretty dog" sites... (Score:1)
Yahoo's policy and open source. (Score:1)
Second: When did Slashdotters become so proprietary about IP?
Tripod et al (Score:1)
Taken from the Tripod TOS. If this is posted lower... forgive me, or just flame me. I'm wearing my asbestos armor still.
Anyway, the point is, it's not just geocities.
It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion. set my mind in motion.
It is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed.
TANSTAAFL! (Score:1)
Lesson one: Read the fine print
Never sign anything until you've read all of it. I suprised everyone in the waiting room at a doctor's office a few months ago by refusing to sign a release that would have made my medical records open to anyone who wanted to see them and absolved the doctor from any responsibility for the security of the info. It was, of course, just a release to cover his personal ass in case something leaked and I threatened to sue. Of course, I didn't sign this release and wasn't compelled to.
The receptionist said that she had never seen anyone refuse to sign it or even ask what it was about. The other people there were just as suprised that anyone would refuse to sign a release. I did sign other releases relating to procedures themselves but not this one relating to the security of my medical records.
Lesson two: As Heinlein said, there's no such thing as a free lunch
Does anything more need to be said about this one?
I'm sure they will revise this agreement somewhat to quell the outraged users. To do otherwise would be bad for business. And, just as certainly, this will happen all over again with some other service. Free hosting is worth as much as you pay for it.
Re:Scary Thought (Score:1)
But as any sensible person knows, you should always look at how such agreements can be misused...
Jay (=
What can you do? (Score:1)
not really contradictory (Score:1)
TC
Contract does NOT revoke your rights... (Score:1)
Not that this is a good thing... you probably don't want to agree to this kind of contract, and if you use Geocities you should definitely let Yahoo know that you will not accept this language. But let's not misstate the issues, as unfotunately happens all too often with IP-related stories on Slashdot.
not claiming ownership (Score:1)
In other words, they aren't liable if you post something someone doesn't like, but anything you post can be reproduced freely by yahoo for their own purposes.
An analogy: you buy an artwork at an auction. You have bought the object, but that doesn't mean you can reproduce it freely. This is the inverse situation. Yahoo is just claiming the commercial rights, not ownership.
Note that the agreement specifically says "non-exclusive." This means that you still have the right to liscense your IP however you want, as long as yahoo has the right to use it. However, yahoo claims the right to subliscense their rights, so in theory you could be in competion with them for liscensing fees. If, however, they enacted that clause, their customers would be unhappy and probably would flock to other webspace providers.
HOLD UP!!! (Score:1)
Have a nice day
Re:Contract does NOT revoke your rights... (Score:1)
Going back and searching through the article for the word "exclusive", I see that it is indeed "non-exlclusive".
I'm apologize for the slipup when I submitted the story to Slashdot, I had honestly thought that it had said "exclusive".
Geocities (Score:1)
I had a Geocities page. After I found out about this bullshit, I deleted the whole damn thing. I reccomend a boycott of all Yahoo and Geocities sites.
What about conflicts with other licenses? (Score:1)
What would happen (legally) if a Geocities/Yahoo user were to agree to this contract, and then post something which has a more restrictive license?
Consider the following (hypothetical) situation: I agree to the license and then post a GPL'd program (source and binaries). What if Yahoo then decides to compile a "best of GeoCities programs CD" without the source. Do they violate the GPL (if they don't make the code available)? Maybe I'm at fault for providing Geocities with the program when I know that they might do this?
Any lawyers out there who know the answer?
I, for one, plan on not updating my old Geocities page.
My GPL'd source is up there (Score:1)
Re:Nothing is free. (Score:1)
I resent your comments. No, I don't have $5 per month to mantain a website. I am a scientist, and I live in Argentina; a poor country with *no interest* in science. I had a website on my research (I am a biologist, a *poor* one) and on Argentina's fishes--as far as I know, the ONLY one. I also had some aquarium articles. I put a *lot* of effort on it (read many style guides and HTML tutorials, even part of W3C's HTML4.0 specification!). I had, almost exclusively, very good reviews. Now my website is *nuked*. Thanks Yahoo! gacp.
Its not theft (Score:1)
Its giving them the rights to 'duplicate' your work, this does not give you any fewer rights to the sale of your work than you had before.
If it can be duplicated freely, how can it be property? If its not property, how can duplicating be theft?
Re:Contract does NOT revoke your rights... (Score:1)
However, to sell it to a museum, they need to state its authencity and source. Without the ability to control the marketing and subsequent distribution (what Yahoo are claiming IMHO) your bargining power is severely reduced.
The other point is scarcity defines value. Collectors pay fortunes for once-off items that cannot be duplicated again. By giving themselves the right to infinite duplication, Yahoo is claiming a large share of any future economic goods that a user may produce, including the power to give it away to destroy your livelihood if your income is dependent on your intellectual efforts.
Nothing technically illegal but it is not a balanced contract.
LL
Re:Nothing is free. (Score:1)
Besides, the Geocities popup windows or the stupid bullet they put at the bottom of the page are very annoying.
Great question... (Score:1)
Here's the important question:
Re:GPL issues (Score:1)
>on Geocities in the past. I'd advise anyone with a project in such a situation to move to another
>provider.
>Keeping your open-source/GPL stuff hosted on Geocities could very well violate the GPL.
doubtful, because Yahoo is claiming the non-exclusive right to redistribute and modify the material posted. This is largely what the GPL allows. There are plenty of subtleties which make life interesting, but these have broader application than the GPL. For example, if I have permission from a copyright owner to post her work on my Yahoo webpage, but no rights to modify, etc., can I grant the rights that Yahoo is claiming?
Re:This will change (Score:1)
Does it really matter? (Score:1)
The fact of the matter is, this information was posted free of charge anyways, so Yahoo/Geocities has no financial advantage to attempt to sell such content. However, if they post a banner ad on your page (they do already) and make money from it, and some pissed off homepage owner decides they want a share of that money, this policy will effectively stop lawsuits.
And nobody uses Geocities for commercial purposes, and if they are, then they probably don't deserve to be doing business anyways.
I don't really see a problem here.
-Restil
That's ok (Score:1)
Yahoo on the rocks?? (Score:1)
They must really be getting desperate. I've seen some of those pages and there's nothing intellectual about it.
Sorry to those dozen people who actually have something useful there.
-- m
Re:This will change (Score:1)
Xoom.com has a much more reasonable agreement (Score:1)
This is from their service agreement (italics added):
"You grant to XOOM.com and its affiliates a royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, nonexclusive, worldwide, unrestricted license to use, copy, modify, transmit, distribute, and publicly perform or display the submitted pages or other content for the purposes of displaying such information on XOOM.com's sites and for the promotion and marketing of XOOM.com's services. XOOM.com disclaims ownership of member sites and will not resell or otherwise convey these rights to any third party."
Compare this with Yahoo/Geocities' service agreement:
"By submitting Content to any Yahoo property, you automatically grant, or warrant that the owner of such Content has expressly granted, Yahoo the royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive and fully sublicensable right and license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform and display such Content (in whole or part) worldwide and/or to incorporate it in other works in any form, media, or technology now known or later developed."
Yahoo's claim that their agreement is necessary to protect themselves against lawsuits doesn't hold water. If that were true, their agreement would be more like Xoom's, which sounds exactly like what is needed to protect themselves against lawsuits. Yahoo's agreement sounds like they intend to profit from the sale or resale of content posted on the webpages
Re:$5/month shell account (Score:1)
Competitors? (Score:1)
After all, if it doesn't cost them anything to move, and the incentive is there, wouldn't it make sense to move - just in case you happen to hit upon a money-spinner down the track?
I wonder what the situation would be if a GeoCities user came up with a winner like slashdot
M@T
Re:GPL issues (Score:1)
Re:No free lunch (Score:1)
Re:What about conflicts with other licenses? (Score:1)
Well, as you supplied it BEFORE you knew they might do that, then how can you be held at fault?
If they owned the rights to the program, couldn't they change the license though? Is it possible to 'revoke' the GPL from a program??
IANAL, but this is certainly weird.
Actually, what happens if I upload warez to their server? Do they then own the rights to microsoft front page?!? LOL
What's mine is mine and what's yours is mine (Score:1)
Re:Once again... (Score:1)
Perpetual? (was Re:Take it easy!) (Score:1)
I'm sure that the remaining clauses can be justified as easily (I don't have them in front of me, so I can't come up with the justifications).
The one I don't understand is the "perpetual" part. The licence gives Geocities/Yahoo the right to distribute in perpetuity your content on any medium available now or in the future.
So let's say you have inaccurate information on your site, which Geocities/Yahoo distribute on CD (using the "perpetual" provision), after which you fix the inaccurate information and publish any necessary retractions, like a good Geocitizen. Someone then complains to Geocities/Yahoo about the inaccurate information on their CD. You did the right thing, but you wear the blame for Geocities/Yahoo's distribution of inaccurate information.
Scary.
Re:Take it easy! (Score:1)
Are they on crack? (Score:1)
8. CONTENT SUBMITTED TO YAHOO
By submitting Content to any Yahoo property, you automatically grant, or warrant that the owner of such Content has expressly granted, Yahoo the royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive and fully sublicensable right and license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform and display such Content (in whole or part) worldwide and/or to incorporate it in other works in any form, media, or technology now known or later developed. You acknowledge that Yahoo does not pre-screen Content, but that Yahoo and its designees shall have the right (but not the obligation) in their sole discretion to refuse, edit, move or remove any Content that is publicly available via the Service. Without limiting the foregoing, Yahoo and its designees shall have the right to remove any Content that violates the TOS or is otherwise objectionable. You agree that you must evaluate, and bear all risks associated with, the use of any Content, including any reliance on the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of such Content. In this regard, you acknowledge that you may not rely on any Content created by Yahoo or submitted to Yahoo, including without limitation information in Yahoo! Message Boards, Yahoo! Clubs, and in all other parts of the Service.
Funny you should mention that (Score:1)
and we came to the same conclusion, about how bad the internet sucks. I sincerely doubt if Geo/Yahoo wants to reproduce kiddie pages with broken links, images, bad HTML, java apps all over, not to mention horrendous background images. Somehow people with those kinds of pages think they're cool, acccccck! I guess I should damper their enthusiasm, but oh pls!
I see the net now in terms of that Sprint commercial with Candace Bergen (oh how I long for the days of deregulation in Alberta!! I'd pay $2 a minute long distance if it meant I didn't have to see another Sprint ad three times in a row!) where everyone is looking into their screens and saying dumb things like "I'm surfing the net!".
Kind of bizarre really. I think Geo is a cult. If you try to say something bad about them (use "geocensored" in hotbot) all these people will come up and get mad at you and say how nice it is that Geo gives them all these things...but they don't realize what Geo is collecting about them and just using them as cheap advertising.
I had an acct there in 1996-1997. Got out while I could, when I was offered free space and no ads by some nice guys. It used to be OK. Then came the java ads, the pop up ads, ads, the watermark...good lord! If a surfer needs to be told that their in a Geo site, then they have to be pretty dumb! I worked so hard to put a site together and suddenly it seemed so hollow. It's not a community, it's a cesspool of psychographics and greed, playing off the hopes and dreams of real people.
Re:Typical... (Score:1)
Re:WRONG (Score:1)
Re:Yahoo's policy and open source. (Score:1)
any lawyers reading? (Score:1)
I got a free lunch! (Score:1)
Then in May 1998, Lenny asked if I would like to host it on his server. No strings attached. No licence, no contract, no ads, no nothing. And it's true.
A year later the site has grown to over 14MB and nothing's stopping us. I can use swear words instead of blanking them out, and use naughty photos and other things that would have definitely been no-nos in Geo.
The funny thing is, a week after moving to the tekknowledge server, I got a second free hosting offer by a guy in California. So now TGTH has a mirror to boot.
Both guys are gonzo fans. Both are the greatest net friends I could ever have. I get more visitors on a faster server. We three sit back and reap the rewards of having visitors who respect us and what we do for them.
Miffed. (Score:3)
This Yahoo-Geocities thing is only the beginning of a bad trend. Has anyone looked at NSI's webpage lately? Or ordered a domain from them? They are trying to get customers to aquire the
The worst thing is, its all downhill from here. The governments are getting ready to dip their fingers into regulating the net. How long do you think they can stay away from the highly publicized and alluring money that is generated by e-commerce?
I think its time to make a new internet, one where crap like this doesn't happen. By keeping things seperate (eg: one nation wide network for video+voice, one for commerce, one for industry communications, one for research, and one for the individuals) everyone could end up happy.
So what does all this have to do with the original post or the first part of my message? Frankly, I'm not sure. I just realized that I have begun to ramble
Anyway, expect to see more shit like this happen in the future.
Re:Take it easy! (Score:2)
Re:Nothing is free. (Score:2)
Hopefully, a lot of people will look at this and see that a better alternative is available.
Re:I'm not buying it.... (Score:4)
Not unless they state that the contract between the user and GeoCities can be amended at any time, which they probably do (and usualy saying that no notice has to be offered). I'm not sure how enforceable this is, in RL, but I suspect it would be difficult to even get them to court.
Of course not. Basically, they state that you are responsible for any copyright/trademark/whatever infringement. Anything left after that they own. Sweet, innit?
Err... what do you think they are doing now? Giving out webpages out of the kindness of their hearts? Nope, they are selling ad space around your content. That's making a profit.
What they are saying now is that they can repackage that content into, say "a best of GeoCities" CD or something.
I find it ironic that people screaming about their IP rights when their sites are chock full of copyrighted images they scanned in, audio files they recorded off of videos and TV, and often buttons and other images they ripped off of other sites.
Whenever graphics artists complain that someone is ripping off their stuff, someone inevitably says "dude, take it as a compliment." Well, maybe you should take it as a compliment that Yahoo thinks they can make money off of your web page... What comes around, goes around.
On removing you IP from Yahoo (Geocities) (Score:2)
Do send them a registered return receipt letter stating in polite terms that you don't like their new terms, and want them to remove your pages from their site. Refference your pages, and your prior user account id in the letter so there is no ambiguity about what account you are refering to. If they are smart, they will reply back saying that they have don't have reliable info confirming you are really you and the owner of the account, or they delete the pages. If they do reply as such, then you return a new reply requesting reenabling your account explicitly stating you don't agree to their new terms so you may remove your Intelectual Property from their site. If they don't grant you this access, then sue their pants off. You now should have done enough to establish that they have gone beyond the right originally granted to them by you, and they have refused to remidy the situation.
As always, consult a lawyer to find out your rights and obligations, but don't wait. Waiting to do this can be construed as tacit agreement to their new policy.
On a side note. When a company changes contracts like credit card agrements they are required to notify all parites involved. I see no reason why they shouldn't be required to do the same.
Re:Take it easy! (Score:3)
Geocities is in the business of hosting web sites. This involves taking material written and copyrighted by J. Random Author and copying and distributing it all over the world. By copyright law, without a license to do so, Geocities would be breaking the law.
So they need a license to copy and distribute J. Random Author's pages.
Geocities also habitually modifies web pages to display advertising. Again, without a license, this violates the law if they distribute the result.
So that license also has to include the ability to modify the pages by J. Random Author that Geocities copies and distributes.
Furthermore, Geocities was just bought by Yahoo. If Yahoo bought Geocities lock, stock, and barrel, then the licenses they previously had presumably go with it. But now Yahoo owns those licenses. If Yahoo got tired of Geocities, it would want to sell Geocities, and the licenses with them. Suddenly, Yahoo wants "transferrable" licenses, so it can transfer them if need be.
Likewise, Yahoo might want to contract out the serving of Geocities pages, which means it would needs to sublicense the content.
So this means that Yahoo needs, to do the basic type of thing it has been doing, a transferrable, sublicensable license to copy, distribute, and modify the content posted on Geocities. It doesn't need an exclusive license, so it specifies that it wants a "non-exclusive" license.
Likewise, since they are just putting the pages up without prior review of the contents, they don't want to be held responsible for any content that is of questionable legality.
I'm sure that the remaining clauses can be justified as easily (I don't have them in front of me, so I can't come up with the justifications).
The problem is... While it allows Yahoo to do what they are currently doing, it also allows them to do a whole bunch more, stuff that J. Random Author might find objectionable.
I think what they wanted to do was something like:
"We respect that you, the author, have a valid copyright on the content of this page. As such, we need, from you, the legal right to provide that content on the WWW, with ads inserted by us, as we have always done, as well as the legal right to readjust how we serve those pages to best serve our business interests. At the same time, we also trust you to be in a position to give us those rights, and do not want to be involved in lawsuits concerning -your- right to say what you say on this page."
Would that intent be justifiable? I think that that intent is compatable with the contract and their statements concerning their intent.
They have their cake and are eating it too. (Score:2)
You understand that all information, data, text, software, music, sound, photographs, graphics, video, messages or other materials ("Content"), whether publicly posted or privately transmitted, are the sole responsibility of the person from which such Content originated. This means that you, and not Yahoo, are entirely responsible for all Content that you upload, post, email or otherwise transmit via the Service.
So, let's paraphrase:
"We're not responsible. It's all your fault. You did it all by yourself. Now it's ours."
Did someone miss the logic train? Is there a lawyer somewhere who can explain this?
Tripod just as bad (Score:2)
Xoom's ToS looks like the old Geocities ToS - granting them rights to use the work royalty free for promotional purposes, but not for sale to 3rd parties.