Google pulls anti-Scientology links
The popular search service removes links to pages that hold material 
copyrighted by the Church of Scientology, underscoring potential conflicts 
between the DMCA and free speech.

By Matt Loney and Evan Hansen 
Staff Writer


Published: March 21, 2002, 11:35 AM PST

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Google was accused Wednesday of effectively removing from the Internet a Web 
site that is critical of the Church of Scientology after it deleted links to 
some of the site's pages from its search engine. 

The popular search company said it removed the links after it received a 
copyright-infringement complaint from the Church of Scientology. Andreas 
Heldal-Lund, Webmaster of the site Xenu.net, said in a Usenet posting that the 
complaint demanded that Google take down a large number of references to 
different parts of Xenu.net. 

"The complaint mentions a ridiculous list of addresses, which successfully 
removes the whole site from their engine," he said. 

Search engines routinely remove links to URLs, or Web addresses, upon request 
to avoid litigation. Under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), sites 
cannot be held liable for copyright infringement provided they promptly take 
down content flagged by a copyright holder. Much of that activity has targeted 
links to MP3 files that turn up on search engines. 

Digital rights advocates said the Church of Scientology's takedown request is 
noteworthy because it underscores potential conflicts between the DMCA and free 
speech. 

"The danger is that people will attempt to silence critics under the guise of 
copyright infringement," said Fred von Lohmann, an attorney with San 
Francisco's Electronic Frontier Foundation. 

In the Xenu.net case, the removed links led to pages that contain material 
copyrighted by the Church of Scientology. On his site, Heldal-Lund defends this 
use of copyrighted material, saying that he believes Scientology survives 
"through the protection afforded it by copyright laws in a way that copyright 
laws were not designed to address." 

A representative for the Church of Scientology could not be immediately reached 
for comment. 

The right to link has been the subject of several high-profile lawsuits, 
including a dispute between hacker publication 2600.com and the motion picture 
industry over code known as DeCSS that can theoretically be used to crack DVDs. 
In that case, a federal judge in New York held that links to the DeCSS code 
violated the anti-circumvention clause of the DMCA, which bars trafficking in 
software that can be used to defeat copy protection. That decision was upheld 
on appeal. 

Another linking case under way in New York involves MP3 search service 
MP3Board.com, which is challenging the DMCA's notice and takedown provision. 
The case, filed in May 2000, is pending. MP3Board had created a delisting 
feature allowing copyright holders to pull offending links automatically, but 
the move did not mollify copyright holders, who were upset that the search 
engine included results from peer-to-peer exchanges such as Gnutella. 

The EFF's von Lohmann said search engines are not required to comply with 
takedown notices, but that most do to avoid the risks of litigation. 

"Search engines can't take on every copyright holder," he said. "It's hard to 
say search engines should pay for this fight themselves." 

Google noted that Xenu.net has some recourse. "Google provides Webmasters the 
ability to have their content reinstated if they submit a counter notification 
to Google," the company said in a statement. 

Xenu.net's Heldal-Lund said this would require the services of a lawyer and 
would be prohibitively expensive. 

Matt Loney reported from London; Evan Hansen reported from San Francisco. 


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Striaght Up Cult
Viva_La_Rob  
Jul 16, 2007, 12:50 PM PDT

What's next? Remove all links to HISTORYOLOGY?
crst  
Apr 13, 2006, 7:07 PM PDT

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