Slashdot Mirror


European Libraries Counter Google Digitisation

headisdead writes "A week after Google substantially improved their UK site, Deutsche-Welle carry the story that the a whole host of large European libraries (with the British Library's tacit support) have joined an EU-based digitisation project as a counter to Google's own library scheme. The project is the brainchild of BNF director Jean-Noel Jeanneney, a sort of mild-mannered Jose Bove for the librarians out there. Divisive pride, or healthy competition?"

34 of 294 comments (clear)

  1. Does it really matter? by King_of_Prussia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I thin kthe main thing is that all these works will be preserved digitally, open for people to read whenever they want to. Anybody saying that this is a bad thing is just a hopeless google fanboi.

    --

    Making the moon less necessary since 1998.

    1. Re:Does it really matter? by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Funny

      The day after they put their separate library on line, googlebot will index and assimilate it anyway...

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    2. Re:Does it really matter? by King_of_Prussia · · Score: 5, Insightful
      It sickens me how fanboy-ism seems to have invaded this once rational community. Every second story is some thinly disguised advertisement for the latest AppleCo product or Linus operating system, and when somebody points this out they are drowned out by a hundred shrieking shills.

      I thought nerds were supposed to pride themselves on objectivity and logical thought? This kind of blind support for a company or website seems to be the direct opposite of what we should be promoting. It's a pity the editors don't seem to care -- they just keep adding inconsequential stories to the ever crappier frontpage, while IP banning anyone who speaks out against it.

      --

      Making the moon less necessary since 1998.

    3. Re:Does it really matter? by _Hellfire_ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've noticed over the last (at least) year or so that people are considering Google the de-facto standard for searches and information accessibility. I've also noticed that whenever somebody creates a project that is even slightly related to what Google does, everybody immediately looks at each other and says in a quiet whisper "Is that... allowed?"

      It's a free market people. The Internet is just like any other marketplace and people are free to do whatever they like however they like. Google is just another player. Granted they are an enormously huge one, but they are a player nonetheless. They don't (yet) have a restrictive monopoly on searches, and there are no laws that say "Thou shalt not impinge on Google's turf".

      It's not divisive pride. These people decided to do their own thing. Maybe they can even - shock horror - do it better than Google. I for one wish them the best of luck.

      Remember, Google doesn't own the patent on innovation.

      --
      "And then I visited Wikipedia ...and the next 8 hours are a blur..."
    4. Re:Does it really matter? by BlueFashoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Try reading the article. It's from a German news site and frames the whole article in a nationalistic stance. Here are some choice quotes for you.


      But he added: "The real issue is elsewhere. And it is immense. It is confirmation of the risk of a crushing American domination in the definition of how future generations conceive the world."

      Google's plans have rattled the cultural establishment in Paris, raising fears that French language and ideas could be just sidelined on the worldwide web, already dominated by English.

      In a stand against a deal struck by five of the world's top libraries and Google to digitize millions of books, 19 European libraries have agreed to back a similar European project to safeguard literature.

      European Libraries Fight Google-ization


      That last one was the title. So before you dis the submitter, read the fucking article.

      It's a French idea to counter American Cultural Imperialism(TM)

      --
      Nice Marmot
    5. Re:Does it really matter? by Westacular · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not to mention the vain attempt to seem topical with a comparison to Jose Bove is not only irrelevant, it's down-right nonsensical; saying "a mild-mannered Jose Bove" is like saying "a quiet boom" or "an unbluish cerulean".

      This project is about making sure that books from non-english, European cultures are also available on the Internet and ones' choice of electronic libraries is not limited to an American/English-language selection, which is what Google is currently limiting itself to. It's "well, if they're doing it, maybe we should too!", not, "oh god we can't let them beat us to this".

      Diversity of culture is indisputably a good thing and all they're trying to do is maintain and encourage that. Any suggestion of "fighting" or "competition" is simply an angle someone dreamed up to make this seem more "sensationally" newsworthy.

  2. Is there really a question? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The libraries are making their content more accessible? Can it be bad?

    1. Re:Is there really a question? by Rei · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Slashdot has been trying to brew this whole thing into a controversy where there was none. First, they tried to pretend that the French were trying to ban Google from running a library project (they weren't - the linked article was about trying to get funding for precisely what they're doing now). Now they're acting like there's something wrong with what the EU nations are doing; essentially everybody here is in agreement that the more digitization, the better.

      Creating fake controversy... it's a case of Slashdot pretending to be a 24-hour cable news network.

      --
      Are there any deer in the theater tonight? Get 'em up against the wall.
  3. Neither pride nor competition by pmontra · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's simpler than that: if Google isn't digitizing European books somebody else has to do it and eventually somebody will create a unified search interface.

  4. HOLD ON A MINUTE by zappepcs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hold on a minute... I think we're missing the point. If Goooooogle or anyone else happens to overtake the public libraries in popularity or usefulness, it is quite likely that the information available will suddenly become subject to what advertisers will pay for, and will turn in to a "top 40" of public information rather than a collected works of all public information.

    If public libraries use their funds to assist each other in digitally making available all public information without regard to what is possible, then we have a GREAT thing, but when the sum total of that body of knowledge and history is governed by someone trying to make money, we, as a society, WILL lose in the end.

    Its NOT about how you get the information or how it is stored... its about WHO is in charge of that information and what their motives are...

    Sadly, capitalism is not good for everything...

  5. Why is this "Counter-google"? by DJStealth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't understand how this is considered "counter" or anti-google by opening up a similar service.

    It seems that a lot of people around here want google to have a monopoly since it's good(tm) and microsoft is a bad(tm) monopoly. (Not that I'm a fan of MS).

    All monopolies are bad, and there should be a free and open market. For all you know, this could be better than google's interface.

  6. The article has it right by treff89 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This turn of events is summed up well by the blurb: Google's service will be a good thing in that it is preserving works which could otherwise be destroyed or lost with time, and, most importantly, _searched_ for information as opposed to leafing through page after page; and the competition will be good in that Google will be forced to improve its service to stay on top. For the consumer: A win/win situation!

  7. Competetion by drakethegreat · · Score: 5, Funny

    Its amazing that something so great exists in this world! The glorious idea of capitalism!

  8. Agreed. by alexwcovington · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is awesome, now not only are some of the grandest libraries in America being digitized, so too are some of the grandest in Europe. As great as Google is, I would very much prefer a world where all the eggs were not in one basket.

    --
    (It's never too late to join the Renaissance)
  9. This is Good... by BlueFashoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm have to say that the origins of this are in a nationalistic ferver. Europe is afraid of being overshadowed by America. This project was organized by the French to fend off American Cultural Imperialism(TM). This is also healthy competition. It doesn't have to be either/or.

    "The leaders of the undersigned national libraries wish to support the initiative of Europe's leaders aimed at a large and organized digitization of the works belonging to our continent's heritage," a statement said. "Such a move needs a tight coordination of national ambitions at EU level to decide on the selection of works," it added.

    later

    But he added: "The real issue is elsewhere. And it is immense. It is confirmation of the risk of a crushing American domination in the definition of how future generations conceive the world."


    This is good even if it did arise from nationalistic pride. (Yah I know, Europe's a continent, not a country.)

    It is better to not have one exclusive source of important information like this. This way we (humanity) are not storing all of our eggs in one basket. Plus Europe gets to put in more books without worrying about copyright. (Damn you Bono.) What would be best is if Google just gave the Europeans a copy of its library archives and the Europeans did likewise.

    --
    Nice Marmot
  10. Read or Die by illuminatedwax · · Score: 4, Funny

    Look out! The British Royal Library is making its move!!!

    --
    Did you ever notice that *nix doesn't even cover Linux?
  11. may make sense, depending by cahiha · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Google scans those books for business purposes, libraries scan them for library purposes. There are differences between the two.

    Now, it is possible (I don't know) that when Google works with libraries, the libraries get copies of the images as if they had scanned the books themselves. In that case, when Google offers to work with a library, it makes sense to accept the offer.

    But if Google doesn't actually offer to work with a particular library, or if they aren't interested in the same books as the library, or if there are restrictions on the use of the scanned images that are stricter than if the library scanned the documents themselves, then it makes sense for that library to scan the books themselves.

  12. That's because... by Zancarius · · Score: 4, Funny

    Remember, Google doesn't own the patent on innovation.

    The USPTO is already reviewing Microsoft's patent application on innovation as we speak...

    --
    He who has no .plan has small finger. ~ Confucius on UNIX
  13. It's about funding by DingerX · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The Bodleian library (working with Google) had a pilot digitization project of the manuscript library for something like 10 years; then Google comes along and signs them up.

    There's a group through the Czech national library that's been putting stuff up, and is exploring offerring it on a subscription basis (merely 3000 Euro/year, and institutions only need apply).

    For me, the best online digitization of a library currently available is already the BNF, and that project has poor quality control (unreadable scans), shaky connection qualities and bad links galore (an essential reference dictionary for my field is missing the volumes containing the letters A-C, and S-Z).

    Without doubt, the EU consortium is using anti-americanism and anti-corporatism to justify the tons of government payouts needed to fund this; without doubt the documents won't be as easy to access as Google's project. But hell, if it puts more books online, I'm all for it. And unlike Google, many of these libraries have been around for centuries; one would hope that in a few centuries, they'll still be here. Google may be doing great, but will it be here in ten years?

  14. Neither by TheoMurpse · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Divisive pride, or healthy competition?

    Neither, you idiot. They are not competing! They are not dividing! They are doing something Google is not -- digitising European works. For Christ's sake, that's like saying by building a library in a small town, you are trying to take a jab at a library in a neighboring town!

  15. Project dates back to at least 1993 by mccalli · · Score: 4, Informative
    I'm have to say that the origins of this are in a nationalistic ferver. Europe is afraid of being overshadowed by America. This project was organized by the French to fend off American Cultural Imperialism(TM).

    Good soundbite, but not at all true. The origins of this project are more than a decade old, and I was involved with it in 1993.

    The company I worked for at the time did data capture. We won the contract to digitis French National Library - custom scanning software was written, pagination checking, QA software...the lot. This was when you needed custom graphics cards to store an largish group 4-compressed TIFF, and a lot of work went into optimising the deskewing sfotware etc.

    Back then the project was called EPBF, European Biblioteqe de Francais (or Every P*ssing Book In France as one scanner operator had it), though the name later changed to just BNF (Bilbioteqe National de Francais). We were always trying to get the British Library interested too, but the dragged their heals and it's not surprising to me that it's taken them twelve years to finally get to the table.

    I rather doubt this is anything to do with Google as such. It's just making better use of what they've had for years already, at least in France.

    Cheers,
    Ian

  16. Re:this only hurts their descendents by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Yes you are right. Let's have all us Europeans forget our languages, our history (that goes back 3000 years) and our cultures because we would be "incompatible". Let's all forget our centuries old philosophy and worship the Matrix technobabble.

    Sometimes people's inability to put things into perspective and understand there is a world outside the good old US of A makes me despair.

    --
    Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
  17. There is digitalization, and "digitalization"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Mod me down if you wish, but I have to say that I found Google Print nice, but not too useful. Sure, it's a nice thing that you can search through paper books, but in most cases you can't actually read them; you have to buy them, and this even goes for classics such as "20,000 leagues under the sea" which are already digitized by Project Gutenberg or similar organizations: Google digitizes newer, copyrighted editions even when there are older, public domain editions available. Thus, in my eyes Google Print is little more than a marketing door for on-line bookstores.

    On the other hand, French digitalization project Gallica, though sometimes mocked on Slashdot, not only digitizes books, but gives the scans away freely (as in speech), so everyone can read the books in entirety or use them as they please. Both Distributed Proofreaders and Distributed Proofreaders Europe already use Gallica scans to produce completely digitized and free e-books which you can search, read, datamine, or do with them anything that suits you. If Slashdot readers are supporters of free software, this too is something they should revere.

    I hope that Europeans will not compete with Google. I hope that they will make bigger, better, and more diverse Gallica.

  18. You can't trust a US company on that by registro · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Libraries in the US are getting closer to censorship than ever. Take for example this new Alabama Bill targeting Gay Authors from an elected Republican representative in the state legislature, Gerald "book-burying " Allen. Consider other minor incidents like the New Mexico Book burning party . Can you spot a trend?

    Google already succumbed to China censorship pressures. Would they resist censorship pressures from the Christian right, inside the US? Yea, right, just like Microsoft did .

    Don't fool yourself, folks. US companies are no longer a reliable for such a task. If Google is allow t create another de facto monopoly in Library Search, we risk gay books, Evolution volumes or the freaking Harry Potter adventures disappearing anytime now.
    Let me ask you, who's going to preserve Western Culture heritage if the US completes it's path towards fascism bushflash.com/14.html? India!? The Chinese!!? Well, apparently it's going to be the French. Good for them.

  19. Re:This could be bigger than Google's effort... by lfourrier · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Moreover, European copyrights expire sooner than American copyrights, at the moment. So a lot of valuable 20th-century material could become available.
    Where did you get this crazy notion ?
    In France, the rights go for 75 years after death of the author (previously 50, previously 25), plus war periods, plus 25 years if the author died for France.
    So, as a sample, The little Prince, by St Exupery (who died in 1943, as a pilot) should have been protected at the time until 1993 (25 + died for France). But then, we had 2 extentions (50 then 75 years). Then there was Indochine war (the mess that became Vietnam war). Then there was Algery. As a side note, Algery is legally a war only since a few years (at most 5), but then, by virtue of a law intented to help ex-fighter in what was before a police operation, all copyrights (even if copyright does not exist as such in french law) where extended for 8 years. And I don't speak about England, where recently, a law declared that the copyright to Peter Pan (which was donated to an hospital) is to be perpetual.
    So European copyrights are not so short, and the situation is much more complicated than that.

  20. "Accessible" ? by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It depends on what "accessible" means. I think these guys misunderstood the motivation behind Google's effort. Google is here to organise information - not to provide it: Google Print is only there to allow you to find books that match your searches, not to read them.

    Try just about any book search on Google, even about old ones. Try Austen's Sense and Sensibility. Try Hobbes' Leviathan. Whatever. Google Print will point you to a modern, copyrighted edition of the book. You will only be able to browse a few pages.

    Contrast with the Gallica project at the Bibliotheque Nationale de France: thousands of digitised books, freely accessible from beginning to end, most in scanned image format, but many in full ASCII text. And Gallica is much older than Google Print (in Internet time it's about one or two generations older), though not as old as the Gutenberg project.

    Judging from his language, the French dude seems to think that Google Print is a scaled-up, English-language Gallica. It isn't. But if European libraries get their act together and start a project to make literally millions of books freely accessible for all in all European languages, hey, I'm all for it !

    Thomas-

  21. Re:this only hurts their descendents by Mant · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The only European countries that speaks English are Britain and Ireland. France isn't in a "sea of English", it's part of Europe, it's in a sea of French, German, Spanish, Italian and a whole load more.

    According to french.about.com 113 million people speak it fluently on a regular basis. It is the second most widely taught second language after English.

    It is the official language of France; Bénin; Burkina Faso; Central African Republic; Congo (Democratic Republic of); Congo (Republic of); Côte d'Ivoire; Gabon; Guinea; Luxembourg; Mali; Monaco; Niger; Sénégal; Togo; the Canadian province of Québec; and the Swiss districts of Vaud, Neuchâtel, Genève; Jura; French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Réunion; French Polynesia, New Caledonia, Wallis and Futuna, French southern and Antarctic lands.

    It's the co-official language of Belgium, Burundi, Cameroon, Canada, Chad, Comoros Islands, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Haiti (the two official languages are French and French Creole), Madagascar, Rwanda, Seychelles, Switzerland, and Vanuatu.

    I'm not French, but I certainly respect a country for trying to keep their own cultural identity. Sometimes that get a bit carried away with the language thing, but it doesn't seem to be hurting them. Remember, English is taught in their schools from a young age, and lots of French people speak really good English.

  22. Re:Europeans Always Fail IT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Oh Great American Lord,

    I apologize to be the small european insect I am.
    Please continue to show me the way to the True-Way-Of-Life.
    How to make war to the rest of the world.
    How to destroy the eco-system as much as possible.
    How to elect stupid arrogant bastards.
    How to venere our Lord the Market.
    How to refute silly theory like Darwinism, etc. and be true biggots.
    How to give weapons to our child so they can be mass murderers.
    And, most of all, how to give lessons to everyone without the slightest doubt.

    Amen.

    Et, tant que t'y est , VTDLC, gros bouffon.

  23. Re:You can't trust a US company on that by registro · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >realize that the French are slimy, greedy bastards, too

    And your point is?

    I want a backup, just in case the U.S. breaks down. France/EU/Congo/Whatever may not be that reliable either, but is good to know that we have fallback positions. The EU is rapidly positioning itself as U.S. backup on many fronts. And that's great news.

  24. Oh great... by Noryungi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just as a reminder, the French project of an almost purely digital library (Bibliotheque de France) has been a huge money burner. Their IT system is a complete mess, a mess in which they have already sunk millions of Euros.

    Who was the President of that fiasco? Jeanneney, the same guy who is now trying to 'counter Google' or something. I suspect this so-called 'European' project is a scam to obtain more money for his own aggrandizement.

    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
  25. Re:this only hurts their descendents by frankthechicken · · Score: 4, Informative

    The US is the longest running continuous government in the modern world.

    No idea what you mean here or what relevance it has, but you do realise that Britain had a Prime Minister before the start of the US' War of Independence? (1735, Sir Robert Walpole first entered 10 Downing Street)

  26. More Books = Good by Spazmania · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Divisive pride, or healthy competition?

    Who cares? If it means more literature is digitally preserved then its all good.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  27. Re:You can't trust a US company on that by Afty0r · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Consider other minor incidents like the New Mexico Book burning party . Can you spot a trend?
    Wherever they burn books they will also, in the end, burn human beings. - Heinrich Heine
  28. It's a part of our heritage by oliderid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well i'm not French, i'm Belgian. I'm frenchspeaker. The sad thing about this project is that "once again" a French official found a way to put some "Anti-american" bashings in his speech. I'm fed up by their rethoric. It looks more and more like xenophoby to me. The French "elites" have a great problem with the US because nobody in France is listenning to them. Read their speeches and then go to Paris. Movie theatres make money with American action films not with their boring state funded nombrilistic social drama movies. Mc Donalds restaurants are everywhere. Young people wear NBA t-shirts and American brands on the street. Nobody feels threatenned by the American "culture" except the elites. People still speak French, still enjoy French food and still read French magazines, still wear French brrands etc. There is nothing wrong with some new ways of living coming from a foreign culture. Even the French language is the consequence of a much bigger cultural invasion (Rome) and France as a political entity from a Germanic invasion (Clovis, Charlesmagne). Anyway back to the real topic: The project is simply great. I would feel more confortable if this European heritage is under public organization supervision than under a private company one. Google is a private company. Its goal is about making money. Here we are talking about culture heritage. Knowledge must be free. It should be copied, duplicated, modified, distributed freely. Nobody can have any claim on patents, copyrights or any stuffs like that. Anyway As somebody pointed out. Sooner or later googlebot will browse their database and index it anyway. Maybe they could use it like they did with dmoz.org . And other search engines too... That's the real point. Sooner or later a better (privatly funded) search engine will come out and will get an access to this public database. Olivier