Annoying the US constitution is nicer about copyright, since it says that copyright is explicitly for limited time, and that it's to benefit the arts & sciences. Whereas the European Charter of Fundamental Freedoms (which was only enacted recently), just states that "Intellectual property shall be respected". No limits, no purposes. ☹
So if they had used quotes from the article they could genuinely be in trouble.
This matter is country-level, internal to Ireland. In Ireland, they have http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_dealing See, for example, notes here http://www.poetryireland.ie/resources/copyright.html under ``Reproducing copyrighted material'', which mentions a citation of 5% of magazine article falls under Fair Dealing protection.
I don't know whether there's EU-wide fair use, but there seems to be in member countries. For example, in my home Poland, we have http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dozwolony_użytek
You could remove all mention of charity for issues involving charities, just to make sure that no-one is being emotionally manipulated by the fact that charities exist, but then articles about things happening to charities would start to resemble redacted missives from some government ministry of truth.
A couple of references:
http://searchengineland.com/google-testifies-before-senate-a...
http://searchengineland.com/would-someone-please-explain-to-...
This is just links. How does the World Wide Web work without linking? It doesn't.
What is the current legal status of linking? In the past it's been considered fair use.
The Belgian Google case mentioned elsewhere here was one where they were upset over the caching, text excerpts and thumbnail photos and not the raw links. At least there, there is a question to evaluate if it is fair use or not.
If referencing articles through hyperlinks is determined to be a copyright violation, then it is also a copyright violation to cite sources in the footnotes of an academic paper.
I recommend following @Tupp_Ed (Simon McGarr) on twitter as he's very involved in copyright issues in Ireland. He previously came to fame when the Irish Minister of State for Research and Innovation refused to participate in a debate on the Irish equivalent to SOPA unless Simon stepped down from the panel.
"> “a licence is required to link directly to an online article even without uploading any of the content directly onto your own website”.
We would be grateful if you would specify the statutory basis of this claim by return of post."
Basically "I don't think that's the law, please tell us the law. Oh you can't find it?"
I'm not saying it is right, nor sensible, but Irish law isn't US law (having said that under Australian law - which is fairly closely related to Irish law - this wouldn't be legal.)
[1] http://hyperom.com/2011/07/16/belgian-newspapers-sued-google...
[2] http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110718/16394915157/belgia...
I can't believe the stupidity of this. Basically Newspapers are giving these 'companies' the right to extort money from anyone who links to their news website.
The high court has assured that individuals do not count and scraping from free services like Google Alerts is ok.
However if you do it in work for a company bigger than 7 people you can be a legitimate target for litigation.
Well the loss of links is going to slap them down the rankings for news stories and their websites overall as anyone with links to their site will have to remove them. Shooting in foot with a shotgun comes to mind.
There is also a case under litigation in the UK and is still unresolved..
If you work for a newspaper make sure your editor understands that the end effect if this jokery continues is that your newspaper website (that you're spending a lot of money on) will plummet in the search engines as people rush in droves to remove links.
Link to the UK NLA debacle. http://econsultancy.com/uk/blog/7826-nla-v-meltwater-are-mil...
Essentially a ruling in favour of this will cripple traffic to the sites of the companies suing, which means they'll lose money and potentially put themselves out of business. Another contender for this weeks Business Darwin Awards.
It doesn't make sense at all. The SEO guy for the paper will probably hold their head in their hands when they discover the site they are trying to promote is taking legal action against anyone who links to it.
http://charitycomms.org.uk/resources/guidelines/charity_medi...
A few years ago, there was a similar case in Germany. IIRC, it got rejected by the judge for being totally stupid.