排名、还原论和责任

Frank A. Pasquale
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引用次数: 34

摘要

在讨论了搜索引擎是如何运作的,并概述了它们产生的排名规则的规范基础之后,这篇文章为那些声称自己受到搜索引擎结果伤害的人提出了一些次要的、非侵入性的法律补救措施。这些危害包括与他们相关的不需要的(但排名靠前的)结果,或者他们声称自己应该出现在排名靠前的结果中而被排除在外。在第一种情况下(被认为是包含伤害),我建议不压制结果的权利,而只是在指向网络用户的超链接上添加一个星号,这将导致投诉人对令人反感的结果发表自己的评论。在后一种情况下(被视为排除损害),投诉人应有权得到有限的解释,说明为什么他们没有出现在排名较高的结果中。这两项权利都是基于《公平信用报告法》对消费者的保护。鉴于wiki的注释软件的非凡进步,这些基本特权对于商标持有者和虚荣搜索(与个人名字有关)来说应该相对容易实现。但是,即使这些特别的提议被认为是不合理的,它们也确实把人们的注意力集中在了原则问题上,这些问题在未来几年将变得越来越重要:可版权的程度,以及第一修正案对搜索引擎排名和其他由计算机算法产生的机器语音的保护。鉴于排名和其他信息聚合器的重要性迅速增长,法律不应轻易允许机器表达获得这些保护。相反,排名者是有责任的,反映了实际的人类判断,并为那些被纳入或排除在相关结果中的人提供了正当的程序。
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Rankings, Reductionism, and Responsibility
After discussing how search engines operate, and sketching a normative basis for regulation of the rankings they generate, this piece proposes some minor, non-intrusive legal remedies for those who claim that they are harmed by search engine results. Such harms include unwanted (but high-ranking) results relating to them, or exclusion from high-ranking results they claim they are due to appear on. In the first case (deemed inclusion harm), I propose a right not to suppress the results, but merely to add an asterisk to the hyperlink directing web users to them, which would lead to the complainant's own comment on the objectionable result. In the latter case (deemed exclusion harm), complainants should have some right to a limited explanation of why they did not appear in highly ranked results. Both these rights are based on consumer protections guaranteed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Given extraordinary advances in the annotation software of wiki's, these basic prerogatives ought to be relatively easy to implement for trademark holders and vanity searches (relating to an individual's name). But even if these particular proposals are deemed implausible, they do focus attention on matters of principle that will have increasing importance in coming years: the degree of copyrightability and First Amendment protection of search engine rankings and other machine speech resulting from computerized algorithms. Given the rapidly growing importance of rankers and other aggregators of information, law should not lightly permit machine expression to garner these protections. Rather, they are merited to the extent that rankers are responsible, reflecting actual human judgment and providing due process to those harmed by inclusion or exclusion in relevant results.
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