German court hands Springer
partial victory in ad-blocking case
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[June 24, 2016]
COLOGNE, Germany (Reuters) - A
German court on Friday handed publisher Axel Springer a partial victory
on Friday in its fight against so-called ad-blockers, which users can
install on computers or mobile devices to prevent advertising from being
shown.
The court said ad-blocking provider Eyeo should not charge Axel
Springer for putting it on its "white list" of publishers and
advertisers it exempts from blanket blocking by consumers.
Springer, which depends on advertising to pay for its publications,
is one of the most vocal opponents of ad-blocking software. Last
year, the German publisher started banning readers who use
ad-blockers from its Bild tabloid website.
Eyeo provides software to block all ads but then offers publishers
the chance to join a "white list" to enable ads to be shown on their
sites.
In most cases, being added to the white list is free subject to a
check that the advertising is acceptable, but Eyeo takes a share of
the extra revenues the biggest advertisers make.
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The regional court in Cologne on Friday found Springer not to be one
of those larger companies who must pay.
But said it did not have objections to ad-blockers as such,
confirming earlier rulings.
Eyeo said it would appeal against the ruling, which it said depended
on "an obscure, newly passed statute in German unfair competition
law".
Springer hailed the ruling as a victory over what it called an
"unacceptably aggressive business practice". It had appealed against
an earlier ruling in favor of Eyeo.
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The logo of the German publisher Axel Springer is seen outside its
headquarters in Berlin in this August 7, 2013 file photo.
REUTERS/Thomas Peter
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Cologne-based Eyeo's Adblock Plus serves the fast-growing market for software to
block Internet advertising that many users find intrusive or interferes with
their experience of websites.
As of March, 419 million people, or 22 percent of the world's 1.9 billion
smartphone users, were blocking ads on the mobile web, according to Dublin-based
analytics and advisory firm PageFair, which develops "ad blocker-friendly"
advertising.
(Reporting by Nikola Rotscheroth and Harro ten Wolde; Editing by Georgina
Prodhan)
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