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Ask HN: What are the legal and moral considerations around content aggregators?

2 pointsby NYCHomosapienover 4 years ago
Sites like Reddit make money off of having it&#x27;s users repost the original content of other people. While it&#x27;s true that many Reddit posts link back to the original source, there are numerous subreddits such as &#x2F;r&#x2F;TikTokCringe that rip video from the source such that a viewer will never interact with the original creator.<p>In a similar vein, there are many very popular Instagram accounts that act as aggregators. They report memes, videos, and clips from others (possibly while adding a &quot;Look at this!!&quot; type white bar at the top) without ever &quot;creating&quot; something themselves.<p>My gut feeling is that it&#x27;s a grey area - I can&#x27;t find any great examples of a legal precedent, and we all know companies like Buzzfeed built empires on this type of content. What does HN think?

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