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Archive for March, 2009

FairShare enables the Sharing Economy

We’re proud to announce our collaboration with Creative Commons and the public release of FairShare,  marking another step in our strategy of providing web wide visibility to all content creators, regardless of size.

FairShare is a one-of-a-kind, free service where anyone creating text content can claim their posts, assign a CC license and understand how their work is shared across the Web.  Nothing like this exists anywhere today.

FairShare was built to enable The Sharing Economy – specifically,  to make it possible for millions of other people around the world to reuse content in a way that provides value back to the original content creator . . . value that each creator can define herself.

Through web-wide visibility, we believe FairShare encourages continuously higher quality content to be produced, distributed and consumed online.   We recognize that there are a variety of motivations for publishing online and encourage you to try FairShare and tell us how we can make it serve you better.

3 Criteria for Fair Excerpting

The New York Times has led a great discussion about excerpts calling out a few sites whose business is largely based on excerpts.   As we reported last November, the impact is meaningful with the average publisher missing out in over $150k of revenue a year.

The reaction has been been noble and passionate; however, the discussion is largely around fuzzy fair excerpting  concepts such as intent that can’t be measured.

We’d like to submit another concept — one that ultimately can be quantified:  Excerpts should be considered fair if the reader of the excerpt still has a reason to read the original article.

Here’s our proposal to measure whether an excerpt is fair.

  1. The excerpt must contain a link. A no-brainer but you’d be surprised how many sites lift content without linking back.  In our studies, this ranges from 30-40%.
  2. The excerpt must be less than 50% of the original article. The actual percentage is debatable, but it’s hard to argue that the average reader will want to click through to read the original article if over half of it has been excerpted.
  3. The excerpt must be less than 100 words. Again, the number is debatable and probably too high for some blog posts, but when used in combination with the % of original article, it can provide a good guideline.

The real question is what to do when an excerpt is unfair – should Google be automatically informed to remove it from their index?   Should AdSense, DoubleClick and Yahoo be informed to pull ads from these excerpts?    What do you think?