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ACAP licensing



This is an important development. From the homepage:

"ACAP (Automated Content Access Protocol) is being developed as an industry standard by the publishing industry, working with search engines and other technical and commercial partners.

"ACAP will enable the providers of all types of content published on the World Wide Web to communicate permissions information (relating to access and use of that content) in a form that can be automatically recognized and interpreted, so that business partners can systematically comply with the publishers' policies. In the first instance, ACAP will provide a framework that will allow any publisher, large or small, to express access and use policies in a language that search engines' robot "spiders" can be taught to understand. It is anticipated that, in future, the scope of ACAP will be extended to other business relationships and other media types.

"As a result, it will be possible for publishers to make more content available to users through the search engines, and to continue to innovate in the development of business models for network publishing."

The URL is http://www.the-acap.org/.

I would like to see this go one step further and have every *hardcopy* publication ship with an option for a license, with automated registration on a Web site (modeled on Creative Commons). Heck, if a robot can get an automatic license, why can't a person? This would eliminate the guessing game and pointless administrative costs of figuring out what is authorized and what is not. Publishers would be wise to promulgate simple, reasonably-priced, and socially progressive terms--"wise" in the sense of "in their interest."

Joe Esposito