Google Lets News Figures Fire Back How service will protect against pranksters is unknown By Sam Biddle Posted Aug 8, 2007 9:54 PM CDT Copied Sergey Brin, left, and Larry Page, shown in March 2003 in Mt. View, California, are the founders of Google. (KRT Photos) People who want to talk back to the press received a major invitation from Google News yesterday when it announced a plan to post user comments alongside links to news articles, ars technica reports. But only people and groups specifically mentioned in the articles will be allowed into Google’s new peanut gallery, which will open its doors later in this week. How Google will vet these comments for pranksters remains to be seen, especially since its algorithm-heavy system seems prime for infiltration by clever bloggers. And how smaller newspapers will compete against a company that excerpts articles alongside exclusive online commentary is also unknown; one group of angry Belgian journals has already sued and beaten Google for copyright infringement. Read These Next A former NFL Pro Bowler has died at age 36. The massive AWS failure exposed a big problem with the internet. A man ended up dead after trying to steal from Spirit Halloween. Marco Rubio struck a controversial deal with El Salvador. Report an error