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Momentum Shifts Against Google in Old Books Controversy

By David Weir | Apr 28, 2009

A number of new developments in the proposed settlement of a class action suit between Google and some authors over who will control the publishing rights of millions of out-of-print books indicate that the growing opposition to the terms of that settlement are gaining momentum.

There is a great deal of interest in this proposed class action settlement, which would establish a registry to administer the process of determining who holds copyright to out-of-print works, as well as paying fees to the rights owners, and establishing a revenue share between authors and Google over the advertising revenue and download fees expected to flow once Google completes its massive effort to scan and turn into digital practically every book or article it can locate throughout the pre-digital age.

Initially, I welcomed the deal (nothing like some money for out-of-print work and it also helps my old books join the Internet Era; but more recently I have joined those raising questions over the settlement and urging the judge to slow resolution of the case down.

Thanks to Peter Brantley and the Read20 List for keeping me in this loop.

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Google Positions Itself to Profit from Scanned Books

    BNET Media - 236 days 9 hours 27 minutes ago

    The debate rages on over the proposed settlement of a class-action lawsuit between Google and some authors over the effort by the search giant to scan and sell out-of-print books and other print publications (including magazines). The U.S. Justice Department recently announced that it is looking into the matter, and throughout the traditional...

  • DOJ: Google can't leverage class action to settle with future authors

    BetaNews - 4 days 4 hours 59 minutes ago

    By Scott M. Fulton, III , Betanews Last September, the US Justice Dept. objected to the proposed terms of a settlement between Google and the Authors' Guild, which would have enabled Google to publish out-of-print titles in its Google Books catalog. The theory of the settlement at the time was, if authors or rights holders are given...

  • Google Books deal still causing a fracas

    TechRadar UK - 4 days 16 hours 45 minutes ago

    Google's plan to digitize the world's out-of-print books has hit another snag in the form of the US Justice Department. The department has filed an opinion at the federal court in New York which notes that the latest settlement agreement proposed by Google "suffers from the same core problem as the original agreement." The original agreement...

  • U.S. Inquiry Is Confirmed Into Google Books Deal

    New York Times - 222 days 6 hours 43 minutes ago

    The Justice Department confirmed it was conducting an antitrust investigation into a settlement of a class action between Google and groups representing authors and publishers.
    U.S. worries Google book plan will hurt competition

    CBC News - 144 days 8 minutes ago

    The U.S. Justice Department has advised a federal judge that it has significant concerns about a proposed legal settlement that would give Google the digital rights to millions of out-of-print books. The brief filed late Friday in New York federal court marks the first time the Justice Department has publicly shared its thoughts about Google's...

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