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11/16/07
AP Press Release
Tom Curley to keynote international publishers conference
on protection and licensing of content rights
NEW YORK -- Associated Press President and CEO Tom
Curley will be the keynote speaker at a Nov. 29 conference
in New York in which a new protocol is unveiled that helps
protect the intellectual property rights of those making content
available on the Web.
ACAP, which stands for Automated Content Access Protocol,
is a new, nonproprietary open standard and an initiative of
the World Association of Newspapers, the European Publishers
Council and the International Publishers Association. It will
be showcased at the conference following a 12-month pilot
project between a group of publishers and search engines.
Starting in December, publishers of content on the Web will
be encouraged to implement ACAP and to express their individual
access and use policies in a language that search engine robots
and similar automated tools can read and understand.
"This conference will demonstrate, beyond all doubt,
the need for ACAP, and the critical importance for the global
publishing industry to embrace new digital tools to protect
its future," said WAN President Gavin O'Reilly.
"The ACAP project is part of a portfolio of strategic
intellectual property initiatives undertaken by AP to promote
licensed use of its content worldwide," said Srinandan
Kasi, AP vice president and general counsel. "ACAP will
facilitate flexible online licensing of the news cooperative's
content across content types, formats and geographies in a
manner that complements AP's content tracking and intellectual
property enforcement efforts."
In August, AP was among the organizations represented in the
first settlement by the Software & Information Industry
Association (SIIA) in its Corporate Content Anti-Piracy Program.
SIIA reached a $300,000 agreement to settle copyright infringement
claims against Knowledge Networks Inc. Most recently, AP filed
suit against Moreover Technologies Inc. and VeriSign Inc.,
asking a U.S. court to stop the two companies from misappropriating
the AP's proprietary news reports and infringing on the news
organization's copyrights and trademarks.
"This project has received unprecedented industry support
and commitment," said ACAP Project Manager Mark Bide
of Rightscom Ltd. "Key players in the publishing and
online industry have been quick to appreciate the need for
ACAP and have responded by lending their corporate support
and technical expertise. Our focus now is to communicate to
the widest possible audience how ACAP can be implemented."
The ACAP conference will be held at the New York headquarters
of AP. For more information, go to www.the-acap.org
Media wishing to attend should contact Jack Stokes, at AP
Corporate Communications.
ABOUT THE AP
The Associated Press is the essential global news network,
delivering fast, unbiased news from every corner of the world
to all media platforms and formats. Founded in 1846, AP today
is the largest and most trusted source of independent news
and information. On any given day, more than half the world's
population sees news from AP.
On the Net: www.ap.org
Contact: Jack Stokes, AP Corporate Communications, 212.621.1720
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