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And effectively subsidise their own energy supplyAnd they own some of our electricity infrastructure too.
Using money they get from UK customers.

And effectively subsidise their own energy supplyAnd they own some of our electricity infrastructure too.
Abstract or extractthe restriction is 30 words - the abstract
People on this forum are more likely to be attracted by an extract than a teaser, the posters here are sophisticated140 characters - the teaser
There is no 140 word allowance.
You can’t sue for reproducing blank spaceswe are on the same page when it comes to defining a word or a character?
Are they ? I doubt that diynot readers would sign up to a relatively expensive paywallThey are denied the benefits of the link, which is why they want it.
Newspapers can - and presumably do - scrape or sweep the internet for plagiarism/copy right breachesThere are over 200 violations on this forum, they'd want some money if they knew.

good effort. But of course it fails. I think you knew that, right?Abstract or extract
People on this forum are more likely to be attracted by an extract than a teaser, the posters here are sophisticated
You can’t sue for reproducing blank spaces
Are they ? I doubt that diynot readers would sign up to a relatively expensive paywall
Newspapers can - and presumably do - scrape or sweep the internet for plagiarism/copy right breaches
the posters here are sophisticated
Who cares.good effort. But of course it fails. I think you knew that, right?
The Fair Dealing argument is a tiny bit stronger. But also fails.
JD has a FT paywall contract which allows teaser content to be reproduced. By your argument one word followed by 139 blank spaces followed by another word is in breach of that contract. Would a court enforce that?good effort. But of course it fails. I think you knew that, right?
Does a diy forum have to be registered as a newspaper before its GD current affairs and political content can be treated as “reporting “The Fair Dealing argument is a tiny bit stronger. But also fails.

Yes a contractJD has a FT paywall contract
Subject to the terms of the contractwhich allows teaser content to be reproduced.
I still don't think you've properly understood it. By "word" I think you might mean "letter or character". for example "word" is one word and 4 letters/characters. 140 characters is not a lot.By your argument one word followed by 139 blank spaces followed by another word is in breach of that contract.
They frequently do - its a breach of contract, with a clear case of damages and accepted terms.Would a court enforce that?
No - case law allows a broad definition. But it fails anyway due to:Does a diy forum have to be registered as a newspaper before its GD current affairs and political content can be treated as “reporting “
You sign up and pay a fee, for access to content. It's obvious to any reasonable person that you cannot reproduce that content to others who have not paid. Particularly via another website which makes an income from attracting people to its content. This is referred to in the agreement as a Substitute(1).JD has a FT paywall contract
Correct.Who cares.
the FT isn’t gonna give a monkeys about some bloke posting something on a forum.
