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Court Rules Book Scanning Is Fair Use, Suggesting Google Books Victory

concealment writes "A judge has ruled that the libraries who have provided Google with their books to scan are protected by copyright's fair use doctrine. While the decision doesn't guarantee that Google will win—that's still to be decided in a separate lawsuit—the reasoning of this week's decision bodes well for Google's case. Most of the books Google scans for its book program come from libraries. After Google scans each book, it provides a digital image and a text version of the book to the library that owns the original. The libraries then contribute the digital files to a repository called the Hathitrust Digital Library, which uses them for three purposes: preservation, a full-text search engine, and electronic access for disabled patrons who cannot read the print copies of the books."

5 of 54 comments (clear)

  1. THIS court finds the story a dupe by 1800maxim · · Score: 4, Informative

    rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/leotg9DJN_g/court-finds-in-favor-of-libraries-in-google-books-affair

  2. Re:I really don't know who to root for here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    On one hand, it's deplorable that Google isn't paying tribute to authors.

    You need to get more info on this - Google is doing authors a favor here. They're taking tons of out of print and generally unavailable books, making them available online, and allowing authors who claim them to get most of the proceeds from their sales.

  3. Side with better access for the public by Namarrgon · · Score: 5, Informative

    A major aim of the project was to digitally preserve books that are out of print. Most of these can't be bought, by anyone.

    Also, the authors of a significant fraction of these books cannot be located. So while many of these books are still covered by copyright, there's nobody available to pay anything to, or to get consent from (well, the Authors Guild might nominate themselves as "default" copyright holders somehow). For these books, proceeds from sales are held separately in trust, against future claims if the authors are eventually located. For the rest, identified authors naturally get the lion's share of sales. Google also profits from advertising, but authors are entitled to a 63% share of this too. And under various versions of the settlement, authors could even claim $60 per book, while Google does the all work of making their books more available to the public.

    Money is not the issue; it's control - the Guild (and some actual authors) are mostly objecting that Google didn't ask first.

    --
    Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
    1. Re:Side with better access for the public by Namarrgon · · Score: 4, Informative

      The one with the most incentive is the one receiving the money; i.e. the author, the author's publisher, and possible any guilds to which the author may pay dues. As with most fields of business, if you want to collect money owed to you, you occasionally need to chase it up yourself (as your example demonstrates, if the putative author is having difficulty getting royalties from his existing publisher; maybe he'll have more luck if he contacts Google).

      And I think quite a few Googlers might take exception to your characterising Google as "a money-making machine, period"; particularly Larry and Sergey. They've sunk a fair bit of cash into risky, public-benefit projects with no guaranteed return.

      --
      Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
  4. Re:I really don't know who to root for here. by sh00z · · Score: 3, Informative

    Most of them are dead, and their works are in the public domain. For those that aren't you just get a tiny snippet view which encourages you to buy the very expensive out of print books, or buy the books from a publisher.

    OK, I'm giving up moderator rights to post this, so you can tell I'm serious. The statement above is absolutely incorrect. This is NOT about public domain. There's no question that Google (or anybody else) can redistribute PD works. This is about Google scanning and then re-selling out-of-print, but in-copyright works. The proposed settlement would give Google the exclusive right to violate copyright and re-sell these works. Sure, they would provide compensation to the authors, but the settlement is inherently anti-competitive in granting this privilege to a single entity.

    So, I also violently disagree with the original poster that this decision provides any indication of the final disposition. The decision today only says that it's fair use to do the scanning. The judge shown that he is not predisposed to grant Google a monopoly in sales.