Technology A big win for open Internet: Сourt sides with an ad blocker in a copyright case

Gandalf_The_Grey

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eyeo, the company behind Adblock Plus, has scored another victory in its long-running legal battle with German publisher Axel Springer. The Hamburg court rejected the publisher’s appeal, which claimed that ad blockers violate copyright by modifying the website’s HTML code to block ads.

If the court had sided with the publisher, it could have meant that any attempt to change the code of a website, such as by blocking ads or by changing the color scheme of the web page for accessibility purposes, could be considered a copyright violation and result in a cease and desist order from the website’s owner. For reference, HTML powers 95% of the Web.

In its blog post, eyeo notes that not only extension developers and browsers could have been affected and forced to pay damages, but also regular internet users, many of whom may not even remember installing certain extensions.
 
F

ForgottenSeer 103564

Not only are ads just annoying and useless in most cases, but so easily injected. They have yet to find a way to keep hackers from doing so yet wish to shove them down users throats. One should have the right to block these.
 

codswollip

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