23.05.2018
Semalt Expert Tells How Web Data Scraping Was Legalized With A Court Ruling
While it may be illegal to scrape data from websites without the explicit permission of the owners of the site, a judge has recently ruled otherwise under certain circumstances. hiQ Labs recently led a lawsuit against LinkedIn for preventing them from extracting data from LinkedIn pages. It came as a rude shock to most people that LinkedIn was told to give the startup free access to its web pages. hiQ used its algorithms to detect when a LinkedIn user is looking for a job based on the changes the user makes to his/her public pro le. The algorithms run on data extracted from the LinkedIn web pages. As expected, LinkedIn didn't like it and countermeasures were put in place to prevent hiQ from further data extraction. Apart from the technical barriers that were put in place, strongly worded legal warnings were issued too. The startup had no choice but to take the issue up legally. hiQ had to seek legal redress. The company wanted LinkedIn ordered to remove its technical barriers. hiQ also wanted its data extraction process on LinkedIn legalized. Fortunately for the startup, it got what it wanted. The ruling was in favor of hiQ. LinkedIn was ordered to remove all the countermeasures hindering hiQ from scraping its(LinkedIn) web pages and also give hiQ free hand as the act is totally legal. The judge hinged his ruling on the fact that what hiQ wants to scrape is data that have been displayed for public view. https://rankexperience.com/articles/article2153.html
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