The US news agency the Associated Press has announced plans to take legal action against websites that publish stories from the AP or its member newspapers without permission.
The AP, which has been facing subscription cancellation threats from a number of struggling US newspapers, also announced it will significantly cut the rates its charges newspapers for its news services.
The moves were unveiled at the AP annual meeting in San Diego, California, and in a press release by the New York-based news agency, a cooperative owned by more than 1,400 US newspapers.
In a crackdown on Web piracy, the AP board of directors said they were launching a "newspaper industry initiative to protect news content from misappropriation online."
"We can no longer stand by and watch others walk off with our work under misguided legal theories," AP chairman Dean Singleton said.
The AP statement yesterday said the news agency would work with Internet portals and other partners who legally license content "and would pursue legal and legislative actions against those who don't."
AP president Tom Curley said the news agency will develop "a rights management and tracking system" for text content and "new search pages that point users to the latest and most authoritative sources of breaking news."