This idea has been tried before in Germany and in Spain, where large publishers used new laws to try getting Google (goog) News to pay for
using snippets of their text and thumbnails of their images.
Thanks for showing your clueless about your bible and why
using snippets of text are for stupidity.
This is of course German national policy — the publishers are very politically powerful there, although their attempts to get Google to stop
using snippets of their text in Google News have failed miserably.
Not exact matches
Have students create a Power Point presentation, with a minimum
of ten slides,
using the images found as well as
snippets of text.
Just this week, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals vacated the district court's certification
of the case as a class action, and told the district court judge he needs to decide whether Google's
snippets of text could be considered «fair
use.»
Plagium also claims that it
uses a proprietary technique that intelligently breaks up the input
text into smaller «
snippets,» and that these
snippets are matched in a way that produces «a much cleaner view
of possible matching documents — a view that is much less noisy than the results offered by the major search engines.»