Links and copyright law |
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Authors: | Pessi HonkasaloAuthor Vitae |
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Affiliation: | School of Law, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7XH, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | ![]() For at least 15 years, there have been question marks over the legal permissibility of connecting one web resource to another by means of links. The purpose of this paper is to assess where we stand in terms of the legal state on the threshold of the new decade. The substantive argument in this paper is that, fundamentally, there are only two sorts of links. ‘Normal’ links facilitate access to subject matter that has been made available to the public and are visible to users as ‘activatable’ references. ‘Embedding’ links, by contrast, automatically incorporate online material and cause it to become a part of the embedding document. On the grounds of the cumulative judicial custom in the member states of the European Union, this paper proposes that normal links as such should invariably be deemed not to create a state of interference with copyright law. Embedding links, however, may constitute an infringement of the exclusive right of alteration, communication or reproduction enjoyed by the copyright holder, depending on the facts and circumstances. |
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Keywords: | Hypertext links Copyright HTML documents Intellectual property Shetland times case |
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