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Dan & Dave's Really Dumb Idea About Who's Killing Newspapers

By David Weir | Jul 10, 2009

(Note: The first names of the brothers were inadvertantly switched in the original version of this post. My apologies! Meanwhile, my colleague Erik Sherman has also published an interview with David Marburger. — D.W.)

There are these brothers named Marburger. One is named David and he is a “first amendment lawyer,” i.e., the same class of practitioners who have been advocating suicidal business practices* to their newspaper clients for some time now.

The other is named Daniel and he is an economics professor at Arkansas State.

That’s all fine. Now these guys, as is the case with certain other legal and academic types, want to resuscitate “common law unfair competition rights” to protect newspapers from “parasitic aggregators” who allegedly “steal” content online. But, after reading through their argument courtesy of Fitz& Jen’s blog at Editor & Publisher, I don’t see a single example of one of these so-called thieves cited anywhere.

All I see is a preposterous hypothetical case study (of the kind economic professors use in classrooms) about an imaginary “Freshfood supermarket” and some assumptions about “parasitic aggregators in Nevada” plundering several unnamed “California newspaper’s” content. Then a bunch of economics modeling, you know, the type that ends with “all other things being equal.”

Meanwhile, all of this imagining is making me a bit dizzy, but let’s plow on, shall we?  The brothers, both of whom I’m sure are very nice and sincere people, state that their theoretical model “explains how free-riding on stories that originate in New York City and Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles can lead to depressed ad rates for online advertising in many other markets – even if parasitic free-riding is less prevalent in those other markets.”

Huh?

Now, in response to questions and critics, the Marburgers say they are not talking about Google News here, that, “In fact, they say Google News is a net plus for newspapers.”

All right, folks, let’s pull the brake switch on this one. I have truly had it with lawyers and professors trying to frighten newspaper executives, already freaked out of their minds, with wacky proposals like this one, to extend copyright law, or reclaim supposedly lost copyright rights, or any other kind of legal shenanigans, when what newspapers simply need to be doing is come up with a new business plan.

And since the Marburgers are not opposed to Google News or any other big aggregator, whom are they talking about? Can anybody show me one of these “parasitic aggregators” that republishes newspaper content in whole? (If there is somebody, we have a better name for him — plagiarist — and newspapers have full legal rights already to prosecute him.)

But there is no such parasite in the real world, at least not one with enough traffic to matter. Because they only live in classrooms or in the feverish minds of “first amendment lawyers” who, BTW, stand to profit handsomely if foolish media execs should ever follow their baseless advice.

*Some of our previous coverage:

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

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Web Buzz:
  • Yet Another Plan To Change Copyright Law To Protect Newspapers

    TechDirt - 148 days 6 hours 42 minutes ago

    Last week, we wrote about Judge Posner's troubling idea that copyright law should be changed to protect newspapers , and this week, a columnist for the Cleveland Plain Dealer is backing the same basic idea as proposed by two brothers, David and Daniel Marburger. One is a First Amendment lawyer and the other an economist -- and I'm stunned...

  • Could Copyright Change Fix Old Media? David Marburger Q&A

    BNET Technology - 132 days 11 hours 36 minutes ago

    My colleague David Weir at BNET Media recently disagreed strongly with an idea presented by brothers David Marburger, a media lawyer with Baker Hostetler, and Daniel Marburger, a professor of economics at Arkansas State University. The concept is to change copyright law to allow again the use of common law — the basis for torte suits, as one...

  • A Closer Look At The Marburgers' Plan To Save Newspapers Via Copyright Law

    TechDirt - 125 days 10 hours ago

    A few weeks back, I wrote an article based on a column written by Connie Schultz of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, where she discussed and endorsed a proposal by two brothers (David and Daniel Marburger) -- one a First Amendment lawyer and the other an economist -- supposedly on ways to change copyright law to protect newspapers. I found this...

  • Irony: Columnist Who Berates Bloggers For Not Fact Checking, Didn't Fact Check

    TechDirt - 118 days 15 hours 39 minutes ago

    A month ago, we wrote about a column by Connie Schultz, of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, supposedly talking up a a plan to change copyright law to better protect newspapers from "parasites." This was a dumb plan no matter how you look at it, and Schultz ended up in a battle of words with Jeff Jarvis that kind of derailed the actual discussion on...

  • Judge Denies Appeal Based On Juror's Twitter Messages

    TechDirt - 231 days 5 hours 46 minutes ago

    The legal world is catching on to social media in a pretty big way. Status updates and other messages are commonly cited as evidence , while there's growing concern over jurors' use of Twitter and other services on their mobile phones during trials. In one case, lawyers in Arkansas argued that a juror's tweets showed he was predisposed...

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  •  
    1

    MusicCity

    07/13/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Dan & Dave's Really Dumb Idea About Who's Killing Newspapers

    I received an unsolicited copy of a limited morning edition from my local paper intended to peak my interest in a subscription. Last week, there was a disclaimor letter enclosed with an apology regarding an interview included in that edition with an individual who had recently died in a tragic shooting incident. It is the timeliness and quality of information not mere availability that drives me to the web for news. It is far easier to go online that go buy a "News" paper...or even walk to the edge of my driveway to pick up a piece of trash printed 5 days ago. Newspapers are screwed...

  •  
    2

    Anastasia P

    07/13/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Dan & Dave's Really Dumb Idea About Who's Killing Newspapers

    David is the lawyer; Daniel is the professor. Otherwise, you hit the nail on the head. Who exactly are these "parasitic aggregators" so flooded with revenue that by paying a royalty, they can "save" newspapers? Connie Schultz, who wrote the original column two weeks ago, says she's compiling a list, and I am eager to see it. (I heard PD editor Susan Goldberg say at a forum a few months ago that they WERE looking at Google, but I guess they walked back on that when they realized how stupid it was.).

  •  
    3

    dmarburger

    07/21/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Dan & Dave's Really Dumb Idea About Who's Killing Newspapers

    I'm David Marburger, one of the co-authors of the analyses that you comment about. Your comment addresses the last two chapters of a 3-chapter book. The first chapter is 62 pages and addresses most of the things that you say are missing in the final two chapters. They are "missing" in the final two chapters because the final two chapters are written to supplement the main analyses.

    Don't you guys stop to read and think about analytical ideas before spouting off about them? I'm amazed at the lack of rigor among bloggers on the web. They are so proud of how adroit they are with web technology, yet they often are too lazy to use it.

    You can read and probably download updated analyses (all 3) on www.bakerlaw.com.

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