Google Makes Concessions On Digital Book Deal

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MICHAEL LIEDTKE | 11/14/09 05:35 AM | AP

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SAN FRANCISCO — Internet search leader Google will ease its control over millions of copyright-protected books earmarked for its digital library if a court approves a revised lawsuit settlement that addresses objections of antitrust regulators.

The offer comes two months after the U.S. Justice Department balked at Google's original agreement with authors and publishers, warning the arrangement could do more harm than good in the emerging market for electronic books.

Google Inc. is hoping to keep the deal alive with a series of new provisions. Among other things, the modified agreement provides more flexibility to offer discounts on electronic books and promises to make it easier for others to resell access to a digital index of books covered in the settlement.

Copyright holders also would have to give more explicit permission to sell digital book copies if another version is being sold anywhere else in the world.

The concessions filed late Friday in New York federal court are just the latest twist in a class-action lawsuit filed against Google four years ago by groups representing the interests of U.S. authors and publishers. The suit alleged Google's ambition to make digital copies of all the books in the world trampled their intellectual rights.

Google negotiated a $125 million truce nearly 13 months ago only to be attacked by a brigade of critics who protested to U.S. District Judge Denny Chin, who must approve the agreement before it takes effect. The financial terms of the settlement remain intact, including a promise to give 63 percent of all sales proceeds to participating authors and publishers.

Among other complaints, the opposition said the plan would put Google in charge of a literary cartel that could illegally rig the prices of electronic books – a format that is expected to become increasingly popular.

In echoing some of those concerns, the Justice Department advised Chin that the original settlement probably would break laws set up to preserve competition and protect copyright holders, even if they can't be located.

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The concessions didn't go far enough to satisfy one of the most strident opponents, Open Book Alliance, a group that includes Google rivals Microsoft Corp., Yahoo Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.

"Our initial review of the new proposal tells us that Google and its partners are performing a sleight of hand," said Peter Brantley, the Open Book Alliance's co-chairman. "Fundamentally, this settlement remains a set-piece designed to serve the private commercial interests of Google and its partners."

In a Friday conference call, representatives for Google, the authors and publishers expressed confidence the revisions would gain court approval, although they conceded they didn't respond to all misgivings raised by the Justice Department.

Under the timeline laid out in the revised settlement, the Justice Department would have until Feb. 4 to file its opinion about the changes. The revised settlement suggests that a final hearing be scheduled for Feb. 18.

French and German officials also protested the settlement, arguing that it's so broad that it could infringe on copyrights in their countries.

The revised settlement would apply only to books registered with the U.S. copyright office or published in Canada, the United Kingdom or Australia.

Much of the concern about the settlement has focused on whether it would give Google a monopoly on so-called "orphan works" – out-of-print books that are still protected by copyright but whose writers' whereabouts are unknown.

If the writers or their heirs don't stake a claim to their works, the original settlement calls for any money made from the sales of their books to go into a pool that eventually would be shared among the authors and publishers who had stepped forward to work with Google.

The revised settlement will designate an independent party to oversee the financial interests of the orphan books' copyright owners. Proceeds from the sales to orphan books also would be held for 10 years, up from five years in the original agreement. After that, the money would be given to charities.

The revised settlement suggests that a final hearing be scheduled for Feb. 18.

SAN FRANCISCO — Internet search leader Google will ease its control over millions of copyright-protected books earmarked for its digital library if a court approves a revised lawsuit settlement ...
SAN FRANCISCO — Internet search leader Google will ease its control over millions of copyright-protected books earmarked for its digital library if a court approves a revised lawsuit settlement ...
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- max08 I'm a Fan of max08 48 fans permalink

What if a writer takes as long to write a book as Ayn Rand took to write Atlas Shrugged: 11 years. What if that writer hightailed it to a hut in Borneo -- because he wants to do the native thing -- and has no access to the web or Google's plan?

So the writer loses his or her rights to his own books? You effing kidding me? Google takes the royalties and parks them somewhere? What if Google doesn't exist in 10 years, like Bear Stearns or Lehman Brothers? Who gets the dough? How does the disappearing writer gets his royalties back?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 PM on 11/16/2009
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I think Google is well aware this lawsuit will come. Those protesters who filed legal motions against Google were Microsoft and Yahoo (among many). Microsoft previously had struck a similar deal but didn't push thru because of similar lawsuit now being thrown at Google. This is normal since most book distributors don't like "big" competition in ebook business, Amazon and Sony would probably be cut by Google if it comes in the picture.
http://bit.ly/Google-Editions-next-year

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 AM on 11/16/2009
- ReedYoung I'm a Fan of ReedYoung 131 fans permalink
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This is good, but I'm much more concerned about Google's opposition to the very reasonable demands of Switzerland's privacy laws, to blur faces and license plates and mount the car-top cameras lower so that Google Earth doesn't provide views over walls to areas that aren't normally accessible to normal sized people.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 AM on 11/16/2009
- ReedYoung I'm a Fan of ReedYoung 131 fans permalink
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Excuse me, I was talking about Street View not Google Earth.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 AM on 11/16/2009
- Inquisitr I'm a Fan of Inquisitr 46 fans permalink

How anyone can claim Google is trying to get some insane monopoly on books I have no idea.

Actually go to the Google books section, all of those "Orphaned works" are free, and if you have a non Kindle E-reader you can just put them on for free.

But who are the ones objecting?

"The concessions didn't go far enough to satisfy one of the most strident opponents, Open Book Alliance, a group that includes Google rivals Microsoft Corp., Yahoo Inc. and Amazon.com Inc"

Three companies that certainly don't have a bias in this.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 11/14/2009
- zannamar I'm a Fan of zannamar 3 fans permalink
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That is true..NOW. While the people that run Google are idealists that may not always be the case. I am glad caution is being taken in this blanket decision.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:04 PM on 11/15/2009
- Inquisitr I'm a Fan of Inquisitr 46 fans permalink

That is true now?

Google books was always free, i fail to see what your point is.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 AM on 11/16/2009
- ReedYoung I'm a Fan of ReedYoung 131 fans permalink
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I agree, both that idealists run Google now, and that the law should not depend on that always being the case.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 AM on 11/16/2009
- New markdf I'm a Fan of markdf 2 fans permalink

Orphaned works are NOT free. The term refers to works UNDER COPYRIGHT by authors that Google can't find to ask permission to use--and the deal allows them the freedom not to look very hard.

Public domain works--i.e., works whose copyright has expired--are the ONLY works free to use by anyone. If Google were only talking about public domain works, this lawsuit would not even exist--there would be no reason because, with public domain works, Google--or anyone else--wouldn't be trying to take something that isn't theirs. Public domain belongs to the public.

Orphaned works and public domain works are two different things---and Google and its supporters are doing a good job of making them seem the same. They are not.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:04 PM on 11/17/2009

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