Comments on: Publishers balk at Google book copy plan
Project to digitize and make library books searchable online called a "broad-sweeping violation of the Copyright Act."
Project to digitize and make library books searchable online called a "broad-sweeping violation of the Copyright Act."
December 5, 2009 4:54 PM PST
December 5, 2009 2:35 PM PST
December 5, 2009 1:11 PM PST
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Furthermore, do not forget that these same people were behind an attempt to get a Federal-Law passed to OUTLAW PHOTOCOPIERS in public-libraries, just a few short years ago. I originally watched this FIASCO rather closely, at that time, because I knew several, thoroughly-pissed, librarians when it was actually happening.
This is the EXACT OPPOSITE of what the PRIVILEGE of "Copyright Grant" was supposed to accomplish for the citizens of The United States of America.
This sort of thing, not only needs to be STOPPED-COLD, ...But, it is time to reverse this TRAVESTY.
notion of a public library, not just this
association. The MPAA and RIAA have been pushing
for several years now to prohibit libraries from
loaning music and movies. A number of publishers
of scientific and technical journals have also
expressed concern about loaning materials or
granting access to them without renumeration (to
their credit, there are other journals that are
staunchly in favor of it).
That said, it seems to me that it would be
prudent for Google to get a ruling on whether or
not their project is fair-use. I know there are
a lot of people that will claim it's clear-cut,
but copyright infringement is not treated like a
crime by the courts -- each individual case is
subject to review and the court has quite a bit
a flexibility. Were I Google's management
though, I think I'd like to know up front if
there might be legal complications down the line
before spending time and effort on it (at the
very least, if it is adjudicated infringement,
what could be done to make it a non-infringing
use).
Personally, there have been academic analyses of
large bodies of text performed in the past that
were never considered infringement, even if
corporately supervised. I would think that
generating an index and even pulling out single
sentences or paragraphs from a book might still
be considered fair-use -- but it's really too
close to call.
I agree with the previous poster, however. I
have several friends who are/have been
librarians and they all perceive a really strong
push, by a large and well-heeled group of
puclishers, to do away with what we today know
as the public library system. The idea being
that libraries are a threat to the publisher's
profitability. Who's going to buy a book if you
check it out of the library, or even photocopy
it while you're there? Who's going to buy/rent a
video if you can just go to the library and
borrow a copy?
Why are publisher's so paranoid?
I have a great idea. Let's privatize oxygen, and charge twenty-five cents for every breath a person takes, then when I've made enough money, I can pay someone to figure out what consitutes a breath or half a breath so I can charge more for half a breath and declare a sale on full breaths. I bet that will cut down on our over population issue, weed out all the broke people eh? Maybe I could sell some on ebay.... is anyone getting the point?
/Tired of watching the world 'shoot itself in the foot' on a daily basis.
//Can't do much about it either. Except b!tch. :)
I think they ought to partner with the Google in their country so that they're not just represented, but represented at the same level as the libraries here in the US participating in the project.
And if Google could then work out some sort of financial partnership with the copyright holders, then it would be to the advantage of everyone involved, from Google to the publisher/author to searcher.
Like the oracle-type virtual libraries seen in movies like A.I.
The law needs to be changed so that copyrights expire 10 years after they are enstated. At which time the work enters the public domain is available for all to use. This gives the copyright owner plenty of time to suck all of the money the are probably going to get out of it out of it.
I would even be willing to make an exception for movies, TV shows and Music since they do seem to have a longer true viable money making market. By extending their copyrights to 20 years.
However, until we the people that elect our politicians, and keep these business and this country going start demanding that they do what is best for us nothing will ever enter the public domain. At least not in our lifetimes, our childrends or our grandchildresn lifetimes. They only things that are in the public domain are things that are so old that they a worthless in modern times.
I mean outside of a few freaks who cares much about shakespire, or music from the old masters or silent black and white movies from 1910 or 1890? Not many.
Robert
But scanning in an entire book is in no way, shape, nor form 'fair use'. It is blatant copyright violation.
All Google needs to do to make it all right is get permission BEFORE scanning a book.
- Why not?
- by May 26, 2005 3:10 AM PDT
- It makes perfect sence to digitize the wealth of human literature for the benefit all humanity. Who would dispute this undeniable truth. The benefit that would cascade to all outweights virtually all other considerations. If the scholarly community as a whole feels economically threatened by this value added service Google is proposing I strongly suggest they re-examine the real reason they engaged scholarly pursuit to begin with.
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(10 Comments)Robert Bagnall, Thailand