Tuesday, 20 September 2005
In December 2004, Google announced its Library Project — an initiative to index the book collections of Harvard, the University of Michigan, Stanford, Oxford, and the New York Public Library, and make their content searchable online. As with all things interesting to do with the Net and intellectual property, this project has not been uncontroversial.
As expressed by the folks at Google Print:
This project’s aim is simple: make it easier to find relevant books. We hope to guide more users to books – specifically books they might not be able to find any other way – all while carefully respecting authors’ and publishers’ copyrights. Our ultimate goal is to work with publishers and libraries to create a comprehensive, searchable, virtual card catalog of all books in all languages that helps users discover new books and publishers find new readers.
Users accessing the database from countries in which particular books have fallen out of copyright will have free rein of the scanned text. However, where the work is still protected by copyright, users will only have limited access to excerpts of those works. In those cases, Google Print will give users information on where they can find a physical copy of the book, whether at a library or through particular booksellers.
As recently reported by Wired, there has been some controversy surrounding the publications still in copyright:
Google has unilaterally set this rule: Publishers can tell it which books not to scan at all, similar to how website owners can request to be left out of search engine indexes. In August, the company halted the scanning of copyright books until Nov. 1, saying it wanted to give publishers time to compile their lists.
Some publishers have called this rule “backwards”, saying that the burden should not be on publishers to identify which books they do not wish scanned. While sympathetic with the publishers’ dilemma, I’d like to point out that Google is giving users access to only small excerpts of copyright-protected works. What excerpts a user sees depends on the search terms used to find the work. Moreover, the publishers stand to benefit from the database, through a cut from related advertising and, if the user decides to purchase the title, from book sales.
From a legal perspective, whether or not Google will be able to continue with this project depends on whether it falls within the “fair use” provisions of copyright law. There is a strong case that posting limted excerpts falls within the concept of fair use. But does scanning the entire work (so that excerpts may be provided) also qualify? Then there is the problem that not all countries, and not even all common law countries, have a broad concept of fair use. In Australia, exceptions to copryight protection exist in the form of narrow “fair dealing” provisions; while a broad fair use provision is being considered, it is not law.
4 Responses to “Google Print Library Project — copyright infringement or fair use?”
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October 3rd, 2005 at 3:22 pm
[…] Tim O’Reilly, commentator and head of the excellent O’Reilly technical publishing series, has a fascinating take on the Authors’ Guilde suit against the Google Library Project. See Sarah’s earlier post for additional comment. 3:20 pm – posted by ben. Categories: IP , Copyright , Law , USA […]
October 7th, 2005 at 2:02 pm
[…] USA Today has reported that a Yahoo-backed alliance plans to provide digitised copyright material online. Yahoo Inc., along with partners including Adobe Systems Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co., the Internet Archive, O’Reilly Media Inc., the University of California, and the University of Toronto, plans to do something similar to the Google-backed initiative that I described in an earlier post. […]
October 22nd, 2005 at 3:59 pm
[…] The AAP lawsuit is reportedly a reaction to Google’s “opt out†approach to scanning copyright works, in which it has established a 1 November deadline for publishers to identify the books they do not wish included. As remarked in an earlier post, Google plans to scan entire books, but to allow users access to only limited excerpts. Google will provide information for users on where to locate copies of these works, including providing links to online booksellers, and (particularly in the case of out-of-print titles) relevant library information. In many instances, these links will mean increased revenues for publishers and authors. […]
November 1st, 2005 at 7:53 pm
[…] Google Print is an initiative launched by Google in December 2004. The idea behind Google Print is to enable searching within the text of books in the public domain and protected by copyright, and to assist users to locate copies of those books. The content of Google Print comes from two main resources: publishers and libraries. At issue is Google’s policy regarding copyright-protected books that are being scanned via the Library Project. […]