> In the US it would be considered fair use if you print a website's content for personal use.
I don't think that's true.
But...
What's interesting about web sites is that visiting them makes a digital copy for personal use. That copying (in your browser and on your monitor) might be covered by the site's EULA, or it might not. If the site's permissions aren't granted explicitly, or they don't differentiate between visiting and printing, the bounds would seem to be gray and a suit against someone printing something from a website they visited might be hard to win.
Everyone in this thread is saying "I think so" or "I don't think so" and no one seems to be able to find any concrete evidence saying it is or is not illegal. I find that to be interesting.
I posted concrete evidence in this thread. I was just being non-aggressive and diplomatic in my wording here.
It's also useful to stay a least a little bit vague, because we're not discussing very specific cases, people are asking general questions and making general statements. Whether or not something will get you into trouble is not something you can answer definitively without actually litigating the issue in court. Fair use has gray areas.
* Edit, just to attempt make this more concrete: "personal use" is not an allowed exception under US copyright law, unless you're using it strictly for backups (fair use). But "Flights to Rome" isn't a US work, the website is authored by Germans, and hosted in Ireland on an AWS server owned by a US corporation but subject to both local and international laws. It's likely that the Berne Convention governs this example. In any case, it's safest to assume you can't copy the material legally.
I don't think that's true.
But...
What's interesting about web sites is that visiting them makes a digital copy for personal use. That copying (in your browser and on your monitor) might be covered by the site's EULA, or it might not. If the site's permissions aren't granted explicitly, or they don't differentiate between visiting and printing, the bounds would seem to be gray and a suit against someone printing something from a website they visited might be hard to win.