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Apr 6, 2007 10:53 am US/Eastern
Google, Agence France-Press Sign Licensing Deal
Agreement Settles 2-Year-Old Copyright Infringement Suit
NEW YORK (CBS) ―
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Google is one of the Internet's five most popular Web sites. (File)
AP
Agence France-Presse, a global news agency based in Paris, said Friday it has reached an agreement with Google Inc. that will allow the Internet search leader to post news and photos from AFP.
The deal settles a copyright infringement lawsuit that AFP filed in March 2005 accusing Google of posting news summaries, headlines and photos without permission.
Financial details of the settlement weren't disclosed.
The deal will allow Google to use headlines and photos on services including Google News and other Google pages, driving online traffic to sites that display AFP news. The companies didn't disclose where else AFP's news would be used by Google.
Google settled a separate dispute with The Associated Press last August. At that time the two companies disclosed a new business relationship under which Google will pay AP for news and photos, but financial details of that arrangement weren't disclosed.
Google is one of the Internet's five most popular Web sites, with 112 international domains and more than 50 percent of its traffic coming from outside the U.S.
(© 2007 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)