Authors, publishers settle suit against Google

Authors, publishers settle suit against Google

Published29 Oct 2008, 09:28 AM IST

By AP

New York: Eager to cool the debate over copyrighted text online and anxious to make some money, Google and the publishing industry announced that they have settled their three-year legal battle over the Internet giant’s book search program.

Under an agreement reached by Google, the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers, librarians and the public will have an easier time tracking down millions of out-of-print books. At the same time, Google and the book business will have greater opportunities for online sales.

“We’re trying to create a new structure where there will be more access to out-of-print books, with benefits both to readers and researchers and to the rights holders of those books, authors and publishers,” Richard Sarnoff, chairman of the publishers association, said in an interview.

“This is an extraordinary accomplishment,” Paul N. Courant, university librarian for the University of Michigan, said in a statement. “It will now be possible, even easy, for anyone to access these great collections from anywhere in the United States.”

Under the Google Print Library Project, snippets from millions of out-of-print but copyrighted books have been indexed online by Michigan and other libraries. Google has called the project, which also scans public domain works, an invaluable chance for books to receive increased exposure.

But in a class-action suit filed in 2005, the Authors Guild alleged that Google was “engaging in massive copyright infringement.” Within weeks, publishers also sued, citing the “continuing, irreparable and imminent harm publishers are suffering ... due to Google’s willful (copyright) infringement to further its own commercial purposes.”

The settlement expands the amount of text to be scanned, makes it available for free online at “designated” libraries, available for subscription for colleges and universities, and allows readers to pay for full online access of copyrighted works.

Google is to contribute $125 million, including about $34.5 million for a nonprofit Book Rights Registry that will store copyright information and coordinate payments. Google will also pay for the millions of copyrighted books already scanned _ $60 per complete work to the rights holder and for the legal fees of the Authors Guild and publishing association. Any sales, subscription and advertisement revenue that occur through the search program will be divided 63% and 37%, respectively, between the copyright holders and Google.

“This may be the biggest book deal in publishing history,” guild executive director Paul Aiken said Tuesday.

If approved by the US District Court in Manhattan, the settlement will end a conflict that had been closely followed by the publishing industry as it examines how copyright law should work on the Internet and whether sales are hurt or harmed by access to digital text. Authors and publishers once strongly resisted free online books, but over the past year, they have softened. During the year, entire works have been made viewable and even downloadable for free, including Charles Bock’s novel, “Beautiful Children,” and works by Paulo Coelho and Neil Gaiman.

Google, which bought YouTube for $1.76 billion two years ago, has adamantly denied the allegations and blasted Viacom for threatening to stifle free expression on the Internet. A trial date in that New York federal court case still hasn’t been scheduled.

Drake said he had no news on when Brown would finish his novel, reportedly about Freemasons, and rumored for years to be near completion. “The Da Vinci Code” came out in 2003.

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First Published:29 Oct 2008, 09:28 AM IST
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