French publisher
La
Martinière Groupe has filed a lawsuit against
Google
over the search firm's
Google
Books scanning project.
The publisher alleges that Google Books amounts to "counterfeiting" and "
breach of intellectual property rights", and is demanding damages of €100,000
for each scanned book.
La Martiniere filed its suit in Paris against
Google
France and
Google
Inc. The action is the first against the book scanning project in France and
the third
Google Books lawsuit worldwide.
The publisher owns the French companies
Le
Seuil,
Delachaux
and
Niestle
in Switzerland, as well as US publisher
Harry
N Abrams.
Google said in an statement to
vnunet.com
that it was disappointed that the publisher filed the suit, and vowed to defend
itself in court.
Google Books provides scans of works indexed using
optical
character recognition technology. The project aims to help users discover
new books and inform them where to buy or borrow them, according to Google.
The service allows users to search for keywords within books, and presents a
snippet of the work, displaying only a few sentences.
Google will only display sample pages when it has permission from the
publisher. Works that are not under copyright are available in their entirety.
The project has faced opposition from the word go. The
firm put Google Books
on hold in August, and resumed it in November while offering publishers the
ability to opt-out.
Opponents fear that Google Books will hurt sales and assert that it will
expand the dominance of the English language.
As Google is building its digital library,
Yahoo
and Microsoft
are backing the
Open
Content Alliance. The project is limiting itself to scanning public domain
books for now and claims to be talking to copyright holders.
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