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Federal Judge Rejects Google Books Deal

14erCleaner writes "US Circuit Judge Denny Chin has rejected a $125 million settlement between Google Books and the author's guild that would have allowed Google to publish all out-of-work fiction online. Chin has previously ruled more favorably on this case."

3 of 234 comments (clear)

  1. How does some guild get authority by assemblerex · · Score: 5, Interesting

    to represent all authors of out of print fiction? Can I install myself
    as the representative for all out of print romance?
    What a load of cowpucks

    1. Re:How does some guild get authority by hawguy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The rest of the members will be mailed a notification of settlement, including instructions on how to get their $0.38 share of the award (the lawyers, of course, will get about $45M off the top).

      Except that there's no payment for anyone (except the laywers, of course), because the judge rejected the settlement -- Google wanted to pay $125M for the ability to make out-of-print books available online, giving authors the ability to opt out. The judge suggests that opt-in would be better, but I'd guess that there are many more out-of-print books with authors that are dead, just-don't-care or would be happy that their books will be available, than those that want their out-of-print book to stay out of print because they have some grand plan to reissue it some day.

      So the opt-in model is far less valuable to public (and to Google) because it means that far fewer out-of-print books can be made available.

  2. That's what *he* said. by jvonk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How does some guild get authority to represent all authors of out of print fiction?

    Well, according to TFB (blurb), that's essentially the judge's rationale for rejecting the deal.

    I am torn: on one hand, I believe that copyright law no longer "promotes the progress of Science and useful Arts", so I would like to see Google have the ability to make a sweeping digital library of abandonware books (seriously, if the authors aren't selling the book, how are they harmed?)

    However, if this deal went through, it seems likely that it would have been the birth of another MAFIAA-style intellectual property racket.

    So, perhaps we are considering the situation from an artificially constrained viewpoint. The pragmatic approach to getting the digital library would have been to take the deal with this newborn devil, but we would have to live with those consequences. The idealistic approach would be to "fix" copyright law so that such a library could be created... you know, the better to "promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts".

    Does anyone else want some of what I am apparently smoking to cause me to have such fantastic & vague ideas (haha)? Maybe I got hit on the head or something.