.
/v3-uk/news/1977233/copyright-suit-hits-google-library-project
21 Sep 2005, Iain Thomson , V3
Google is being sued over its plans to digitise the world's libraries. The US Authors Guild filed a class action suit today in a federal court in Manhattan, alleging that Google is engaging in widespread copyright infringement at the expense of the rights of individual writers.
"This is a plain and brazen violation of copyright law," said Authors Guild president Nick Taylor.
"It is not up to Google, or anyone other than the authors, the rightful owners of these copyrights, to decide whether and how their works will be copied."
The suit stems from a deal Google signed with the New York Public Library and the university libraries of Stanford, Harvard, Oxford and Michigan to digitise their works.
The Authors Guild claims that the writers of these works, some of which are still under copyright, have not been consulted. The organisation is demanding an injunction to stop the process, and is seeking damages.
Last month Google put its scanning schedule on hold until November to allow authors more time to withdraw books from the process. The search giant has promised not to digitise any work if the author objects, but has left the onus on the authors to act.
Google's eventual plan is to have every book ever printed available for viewing over a web browser, either in its entirety if the copyright has elapsed or as a summary if not.
Do you agree?
Google Digitizing Books
Get on the bandwagon already. You saw what happened when Metallica and others went after Napster. This is the future and if you try to prevent Google from this project then you will only entice P2P sharing just like MP3's. You can go to any library and take out a book, this merely facilitates the transaction. What if you went to a library and they informed you that you can only view the books in segments and can't leave with them (this will be the main argument for the Google defense team)? This is going to happen one way or the other, you can't stop a rolling train.
Posted by Marc, 21 Sep 2005
If they don't object now,
If they don't object to it now, what are the chances they'll want to sue in the future? Very low. If they do want to sue, it's not a big deal if google has to take it down. And it probably won't be very costly to google in any case.
Posted by M., 23 Sep 2005