This is the sleeziest thing I have ever seen.
Newspaper Chains New Business Plan: Copyright Suits
By David Kravets July 22, 2010
The Courts, intellectual property Steve Gibson has a plan to save the media worlds financial crisis and its not the iPad.
Borrowing a page from patent trolls, the CEO of fledgling Las Vegas-based Righthaven has begun buying out the copyrights to newspaper content for the sole purpose of suing blogs and websites that re-post those articles without permission. And he says hes making money.
We believe its the best solution out there, Gibson says. Media companies assets are very much their copyrights. These companies need to understand and appreciate that those assets have value more than merely the present advertising revenues.
Gibsons vision is to monetize news content on the backend, by scouring the internet for infringing copies of his clients articles, then suing and relying on the harsh penalties in the Copyright Act up to $150,000 for a single infringement to compel quick settlements. Since Righthavens formation in March, the company has filed at least 80 federal lawsuits against website operators and individual bloggers whove re-posted articles from the Las Vegas Review-Journal, his first client.
Now hes talking expansion. The Review-Journals publisher, Stephens Media in Las Vegas, runs over 70 other newspapers in nine states, and Gibson says he already has an agreement to expand his practice to cover those properties. (Stephens Media declined comment, and referred inquiries to Gibson.) Hundreds of lawsuits, he says, are already in the works by years end. We perceive there to be millions, if not billions, of infringements out there, he says.