Google Print Holds The Presses 134
brokenarmsgordon writes "Google Print, the project launched in December to digitize the entire collections of five major libraries, has been put on hold until November. Google will stop cataloging in-copyright books until November to give publishers time to decide if they would like to participate and to mark which books they want excluded from the index. "
copyright issues (Score:5, Interesting)
It will be interesting to see which titles will be available through it once Google Print is ready for prime-time use.
Re:copyright issues (Score:4, Informative)
Re:copyright issues (Score:2, Informative)
from http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/browse/-/1019 7041/qid=1123889023/sr=1-1/102-8303520-3675334 [amazon.com]
The important part is the limit in pages you can read after you find a term
Re:copyright issues (Score:1, Informative)
That, and the fact that Amazon's system is explicitly opt-in for the publisher.
They know better than anyone.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:copyright issues (Score:2)
Google Blog (Score:3, Interesting)
It's actually kinda funny..
That's right: Google won't even scan any book copyright holders ask them not to, even though doing so is perfectly legal. It's as if copyright holders got to dictate what books get placed in libraries. Their short-sighted selfishness will cost us all, depriving us of our heritage in our online Library of Alexandria.
Re:Google Blog (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, political correctness sure dictated which books got taken OUT of libraries ...
Re:Google Blog (Score:5, Informative)
Funnier if google said it (Score:5, Informative)
Google's actual blog is http://googleblog.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com]
From there we have:
"So now, any and all copyright holders - both Google Print partners and non-partners - can tell us which books they'd prefer that we not scan if we find them in a library. To allow plenty of time to review these new options, we won't scan any in-copyright books from now until this November."
So unless told otherwise, Google will assume they have permission to scan copyright work.
Re:Google Blog (Score:2, Interesting)
Google Blog-"/." Philantropy. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Google Blog (Score:1)
Equally useless given the language barrier.
Re:Google Blog (Score:2)
Re:Google Blog (Score:2, Funny)
Speak for yourself -- I know ancient Greek, you insensitive clod!
Re:Google Blog (Score:1)
Well, as it turns out, second most powerful.
. .
Humpty-Dumpty was pushed.
. .
Sometimes typos turn out to be wonderful.
KFG
Re:Google Blog (Score:1)
Re:Google Blog (Score:2, Insightful)
In a matter of years the human race managed to do something extraordinary, and previously unimagined: eliminate scarcity. Now *everyone* can have access to any information, for free or very low cost. This is something that could change everything. Scholars through the ages have dreamed of this.
But the only thing people can think of is how to lock it up and go back to the way things were before.
It's as if someone invented the rep
Re:Google Blog (Score:2)
replicators would change the world in many ways some of them nice some of them horrid. (imagine good quality high power firearms on demand without the need for a huge factory....)
back on topic though whilst sooner or later the world will have to adapt to mass communication and freely availible information
Re:Google Blog (Score:1)
One thing that annoyed me about Star Trek is how often the safeguards failed, particularly on the holi-deck. There must've been at least 5 TNG episodes with that theme, you'd think after 2 or 3 failures in a couple of years they'd say "Hmmm, I think our holideck may be defective."
Google Print hack? (Score:2, Interesting)
The real question is whether someone has yet implemented a hack (as described in this K5 post http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2005/3/7/95844/59875 [kuro5hin.org]
I am a student, and my reading list for next semester will cost me $1850 (Amazon prices). If anyone has any updates on the 'google print hack' I (and thousands of others like me) will be most appreciative!
(PS, sorry for posting as AC, but for some reason
Re:Google Print hack? (Score:1)
Re:Google Print hack? (Score:3, Insightful)
You'd get in far less trouble.
Federal felony vs state/local misdemeanor.
Of course, buying the books used is ethical and (currently, as of my writing this post) legal and will save you quite a bit.
Re:Google Print hack? (Score:1)
I am a student, and my reading list for next semester will cost me $1850 (Amazon prices). If anyone has any updates on the 'google print hack' I (and thousands of others like me) will be most appreciative!
Your legal options are as follows:
1. Buy the books from Amazon and suck up the expense.
2. Buy the books from a used bookstore and suck up a somewhat smaller expense.
3. Check them out from the university library for the semester. Of course, your books can probably be recalled, and popular books may n
Which books to exclude? (Score:3, Funny)
I cant imagine them letting too many of their 'products' become free...
Re:Which books to exclude? (Score:1)
Actually, there is a difference (Score:3, Insightful)
Not saying its a bad thing and i wish google the best. I just dont see it happening quite like they want, due to greed in corporate society today..
Re:Actually, there is a difference (Score:2, Insightful)
I fail to see how copyright represents 'greed in corporate society today' anymore than it would have fifty years ago when the writers and publishers would have also objected to this kind of thing.
Yes you do fail to see (Score:5, Insightful)
You failed to see whether copyright is necessary to protect the interests of writers, why increasingly unneccessary publishers are asking for more money for cheaper books made on shittier paper.
You failed to explain why we need basic calculus 17th edition when nothing a schoolboy needs to learn has changed in at least a century.
You fail to see that most writers, coders, musicicans, actors, etc. get very little because they aren't annointed as the "in flavor" by their corresponding distribution megalith. These distribution chains are far less necessary than ever before, yet they we have never seen such a rampage against fair use, privacy, individual rights as we see today. All driven by your favorite media special interest group.
you fail to explain why a writer or coder is somehow more deserving than a plumber who cannot write plumbing 1.0 and then sit on his fscking a$$ for the rest of his life. People sitting around doing nothing their whole lives are just as indicitave of "imperfections in the system" as the unemployed poor.
Try working for a living. Done writing a book or some code? Write some more! If your product is worth it, and you price your code correctly, you will make enough money to support you and your family in non-extravagant way - like the plumber. If your project requires more people, scale up accordingly, but stop looking to retire rich and live the rest of your life like f-ing bobby brown and that crack hoe whitney houston.
Musicians, Writers, Actors are all the same, they want to hit the f-ing jackpot while the rest of us work our lives to support them. Arguments of utility to society are bullshit. how did brad pitt make my life better than the guy who unplugs the sewer, or the laid off engineer who designed my 802.11 pcb?
WAAAY TOO MANY creative types worship this jackpot mentality, thinking only about the riches they will win if they join the system. but most who swing for the fences miss and get nothing. How is that different than playing lotto?
Copyrights, patents, IPOs, etc. are not for regular people, they are for publishers, producers, lawyers, Wall Street types, and other parasites who spend their time getting between you and your customer while you spend your time working. Why let them? Is it because your reach exceeds your grasp?
Stop fighting their battle against individual rights for them. Stop helping them to plant spy chips in your DVD player and computer, "to keep you honest".Stop letting them sell you perfectly good hardware with broken software that is used to pull you by the nose where they want you to go. Stop helping them lobby for media taxes and keeping you from looking at your movie on the OS you choose.
In short, just STFU you pompous a$$.
"due to greed in corporate society today..
I fail to see how copyright represents 'greed in corporate society today' anymore than it would have fifty years ago when the writers and publishers would have also objected to this kind of thing."
Re:Yes you do fail to see (Score:2)
Re:Yes you do fail to see (Score:2)
It's not often you come across a great
My Hat's off to you sir/madam.
And in the spirit of it. I'm going to take a copy and shove it in the face of the next a$$ that tries to defend any money/reward for nothing princple! I just wish I could attribute it to some one. Sorry AC.
Re:Yes you do fail to see (Score:2)
Personally, I don't believe the government should pass laws protecting such a system, any more than the government
Re:Yes you do fail to see (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Yes you do fail to see (Score:2)
There exists at the very least two groups among professional writers, or indeed most creative types. There are those pursuing that flighty mistress fame and her cousin fortune. However the vast majority of professional "creative types" lure in obscurity. Writers that are only published in obscure literary journals and read only be their own kind. There is an antagonistic
Re:Yes you do fail to see (Score:1)
Re:Actually, there is a difference (Score:2)
You and three friends walk into your local library, pick up a book, set it on the table, and all four of you begin reading it simultaneously, turning the page only when all four of you are done. Think the librarian will rush over and throw you all out?
Not unless you smell bad or are naked or something.
Re:Actually, there is a difference (Score:2)
Re:Which books to exclude? (Score:1)
Re:Which books to exclude? (Score:1)
Not to be a flamebait, but what are you, a communist?
Welcome to capitalism.
Re:Which books to exclude? (Score:2)
Simply reverse the changes to copyright - 28 years is long, but livable. Make a requirement for copyright protection - either release the work unencrypted, or give the LoC an unecrypted copy to be distributed when it becomes public domain.
Disney, arguably one of the shining stars of the capitalist world, made their money borrowing heavily from the public domain. Requiring their copyrights to end in a reasonable time is n
whaaa..? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:whaaa..? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or just like a library has to obtain permission from the publisher to add a book to its collection.
Re:whaaa..? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:whaaa..? (Score:1)
If you or I were to scan books and offer them online we'd be hung out to dry by lawyers. But Google has money, and lawyers, and thus they can do whatever is profitable for them and their investers. It the way nature/ I mean the free market intended capitalism to work. If you have more money, you win nearly every time.
Google has the same right to scan books as the web (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps it is the tremendous usefulness of Google that has kept it from dying underneath an avalanche of lawsuits for its downloading of websites, but whatever the case Google is a company that uses other people's copyrighted material for commercial gain.
Is it fair use? It is to me, but I think downloading the entirety of a commercial work on an opt out basis is not fair use under the historical legal of fair use in the US.
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:1)
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:2)
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:2)
That is an interesting distinction, using the idea that you have a "fair use" right to change the format and/or copy a work you own for your own use, but it would leave open the possibility that it could scan a library's books on the library's behalf.
Next would come the question of if you can use copyrighted ma
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:2)
That's precisely what Google is doing... Furthermore, it's consistent with what the Library of Congress (and, I presume, it's British equivalents) was intended for
As for Copyright infringement, it gets a bit more interesting. If Google manages to make it really difficult for anybody to bulk-grab entire books (or large proportions of them), and it turns out that being in the database increases sales of the
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:1)
Your fair-use rights to a work are no different when you check the book out of a library as when you buy it.. when it's in your posession, the same rules apply.
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:2)
I guess that means that the Google Cache [66.102.7.104] and the Wayback Machine [archive.org] are illegal.
They are a big question (Score:2)
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, AFAIK that is accurate: Google does have the right both to scan the web and to scan the books. Google is not suspending the scanning of copyrighted books because it's against the law; they appear to be doing so as a kind of "good faith" gesture towards publishers. It appears to be entirely legal for Google to scan copyrighted books on behalf of libraries that own the books (a lot of people s
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:2)
This might be different with books, where the copyright owner's expectations are different.
Re:Google has the same right to scan books as the (Score:2)
> work on an opt out basis is not fair use under the > historical legal of fair use in the US.
Maybe, maybe not. Remember the world's bigger than the US, and different laws may apply in other countries.
It's all about the money ... (Score:2)
It's the money, stupid.
Good. (Score:1)
publishers' heads are gonna explode (Score:1, Funny)
Help make your voice heard... (Score:5, Informative)
Tor Books
E-mail: inquiries@tor.com
Fax: (212) 388-0191
Dead Tree:
Tor Books
175 Fifth Avenue
New York NY 10010.
Perseus Books Group
2300 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Phone: 800-371-1669
Fax: 800-453-2884
Email: perseus.orders@perseusbooks.com
http://www.perseusbooksgroup.com/perseus/contact_
Random House
customerservice@randomhouse.com
Random House, Inc.
1745 Broadway
New York, NY 10019
Phone: (212) 782-9000
http://www.randomhouse.com/about/contact.html [randomhouse.com]
Re:Help make your voice heard... (Score:2)
Writing to these publishers won't do any good. You're not giving them any better alternatives.
Re:Help make your voice heard... (Score:2)
Say what? Nobody is making anything free here. You can search for the text of a book and see what book it was in, so lets say I remembered some part of a book I read as a kid (say, about some kid who found a box that let him travel between worlds in certain places ("windows" may have been the term) and control his time relative to the time in the worlds he came to, and used that to end a war between humans and aliens by taking all the blasters from the aliens while he had time
Re:Help make your voice heard... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Help make your voice heard... (Score:3, Funny)
After all, if they hurt Google, Google is under no obligation to make it so their site appears before page 800 in the search results.
Re:Help make your voice heard... (Score:1)
funny (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:funny (Score:1)
That automatically puts mod brains on auto-pilot where they chant "Fun...ny.....fun....ny" and mod the post as such.
Go ahead and try it yourself next time. But start your post with, "here's an interesting thought..." and see how many Interesting mods you get even if what you said is total drivel.
Bad that Copyright takes so long to expire (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Bad that Copyright takes so long to expire (Score:1, Insightful)
It should also be on RAID storage, and "someone else" should pay for it...
Re:Bad that Copyright takes so long to expire (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Bad that Copyright takes so long to expire (Score:1)
Re:Bad that Utopias takes so long to come true. (Score:2)
People have been desiring reward for their work long before you were born.
Of course they have, but that doesn't mean that they should be compensated based upon their desires or the fact that they worked alone.
One may work very hard to build a sand castle on the beach, but come high tide, it has no economic value. Should he be paid for his ephemeral creation? After all, he did work hard for it, and choosing between not being compensated for it (over 75 years, as it were) or not being compensated for i
Re:Bad that Copyright takes so long to expire (Score:2)
It used to be that knowledge was peer-to-peer. Either verbally transmitted, or hand-copied. Anyone who could speak or write would basically be able to produce a viable copy.
With the introduction of the printing press, it was possible for the few who owned a press to manufacture many
Silly publishers (Score:1)
Publishers, be aware... (Score:1)
It's kind of sad that you really have to be in tune with the electronic world to know that fairly soon your books are getting copy & pasted into a public company's database. Hopefully Google's actually attempting to get the word out about this service to as many publishers as possible. A web page, blog entries, slashdottings, even a press release aren't good enough for the partly unwired publishe
Only Project Gutenberg is delivering. (Score:4, Interesting)
Remember Al Gore talking about digitizing the Library of Congress so that a little girl in Carthage Tennessee would have access to books? That never happened either.
Al Gore talks big and the Library of Congress never delivers.
Google talks big and doesn't deliver.
And meanwhile, eccentric Michael Hart and his wild, impractical idealists digitize book after book after book.
About half the books on the Net, as indexed by the UPenn online books page [upenn.edu] were digitized by Project Gutenberg.
Hart drives all the eBook mavens crazy. He does everything wrong. He doesn't use Open EBook markup. He doesn't worry about conforming PG texts to authoritative academic editions. He doesn't posture.
All he does is get the job done.
Advertising Opportunity? (Score:1)
Danger: Google (Score:1)
Re:Danger: Google (Score:1)
Re:Danger: Google (Score:1)
Yes, you're right, when adults do it they *do* stick to it. And adults *do* do it.
robots.txt for books (Score:1)
That would be a solution publishers could use.
Re:robots.txt for books (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe in the near future we will see some sort of robots.txt page at the start of every book.
Yeah, maybe it could say something like "All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers."That would be a solution publishers could use.
Oh wait, this one already does!
Who will write software to recover books (Score:2)
Re:Who will write software to recover books (Score:2)
Write a container for the browser. Every time Google serves up pages from a book, upload those pages to FreeNet, and also modify an index (use FreeNetdb, if there is such a thing?) containing the book name and page number(s). Once all the pages are there, it'll mark the book as complete.
Once enough people install the container and do some searches, Google will have served entire books into the public domain.
It would be difficult for them to detect, as well, since the sea
Beginning of the end? (Score:2)
On second thought, maybe it's not that shocking. Maybe that's why I predicted this in June [lisnews.com] and April [lisnews.com]....
Google isn't doing this right (Score:4, Interesting)
The contract with U.Michigan was confidential until they posted it in response to a request I filed under Michigan's freedom of information law. Google gets to scan everything, and U.Michigan gets a copy of the scanned files. However, U.Michigan is not able to do anything with their copies except to offer it on their own website, assuming that they take measures to prevent excessive downloading and automated crawling.
By way of contrast, Google gets to do anything it wants with its copies, forever, and that includes selling it to partners, or passing them along to any successor of Google. They will show ads for where to buy copies of out-of-print books. The entire book will be scanned, but only snippets will be shown surrounding the search term for books that are in copyright. With this latest announcement, they say that they will not show sponsored links unless the publisher agrees to join in the Google Print program.
Google considers anything published after 1922 to be copyrighted, except for government documents that had no copyright to begin with. Now they are inviting publishers to opt-in to their Print program, so that more than snippets can be displayed, and the publisher can get a cut of the sponsored links that are clicked on.
But you have to ask yourself, how many books that were published since 1922 are represented by current publishers who are aware of Google's plans and inclined to respond to Google's invitation to opt-in or opt-out? Consider that many publishers are no longer the rights holder once a book goes out of print, as contracts often stipulate that the copyright then reverts to the author. When Google talks about allowing publishers to opt-in to the Print program, or opt-out of the scanning, my guess is that we're talking about less than 20 percent of all copyrighted material that Google plans to grab.
The other 80 percent will be grabbed by Google without the "express consent" of the rights holder that is required by copyright law, usually with the rights holder not even being aware that an opt-out is available from Google. This is what Google has its eyes on, but it's not what they want you to think about when considering this issue. The used-book purchase links alone will be a cash cow for this 80 percent. Their statement that they will not show sponsored links on pages from copyrighted books that have not opted-in is not enforceable, given that they can chang their mind about that further down the road. It's just not fair to rights holders.
The proper procedure would be for Google to solicit permission for anything in copyright, and skip that book if there is no response. They should make an arrangement with some entity similar to the Copyright Clearance Center, and invite rights holders to submit permission forms for Google to scan their books. A license fee might be involved, so that these holders can get some compensation. The question of whether ads are allowed, or how much content can be displayed, could be negotiated as part of the license fee. Then if the library has the book, no one will complain when Google scans it. If it doesn't have the book, perhaps the rights holder can make a copy available if Google still wants it.
That's what Google should be doing, instead of ripping off every rights holder since 1922 by default. There is more on this issue at Google Watch [google-watch.org].
two different projects (Score:3, Informative)
One is a completely voluntary project, at print.google.com, where publishers send Google hardcopies or PDFs, and Google indexes them. I've participated in this project as a publisher. If you want to see an example of Google print, go to print.google.com [google.com] and type in the search text "Even as great and skeptical a genius as Galileo" (with the quotes). It'll send you to one of my books, and supply you with a link to buy it. (Unlike most of the books in the progran, my books are also CC licensed, so you could actually download the PDF for free if you didn't want a nice bound copy.) The idea is that it's meant to help publishers boost sales: people search in Google, run across your book, and buy it. It's not meant to be a way to read an entire book --- they make it a hassle to do that.
The other project is completely seperate: to scan and index the contents of some libraries.
AFAIK, the name "Google Print" was only supposed to refer to the first (opt-in) project.
So far my experience is that Google Print is a complete bust. I sent them the printed books last year. They scanned them and OCRed them, and then said they'd go live Real Soon Now, which never happened. They sent me an apology note, along with cool little digital clock embedded in a blue doll that says Google on its chest. The apology note said it sould happen Real Soon Now, but that was some time ago. IIRC there was a period of several weeks where I could search in regular google, and and some of the results would be Google Print results from my books, but now they appear to have turned that off. (Try it with the quoted phrase I gave above, and it only gives links to my PDFs and mirrors on other sites, but nothing from Google Print.) Since people don't normally go to print.google.com to search, that means the program basically isn't doing anything right now.
It's breaking the law. (Score:2, Informative)
And just because the law is 'behind' modern technology doesn't make the law wrong.
This law is there to protect people and allow them to make a living off of publishing written material.
This could potentially steal a lot of money from the copyright owners. If Google _asks_ for and gets permission from the copyright owner (not assumes it's OK unless told otherwise), then fine, scan the thing and put it online.
But until Google has the permission of t
What's the point of waiting N months? (Score:2, Informative)
Google needs permission from every publisher for each and every book they wish to publish through the web.
Just waiting N months for complaints doesn't grant G any rights, no matter how long N is.
Re:What's the point of waiting N months? (Score:1)
It does give G(oogle) an indication that publisher P is asleep and probably wont sue.
online print? (Score:1)
And now a for-fee download service, I would bite (Score:1)
They already have each book scanned (and by the looks of it pretty well formatted) so that turning them into any random e-book format will be a piece of cake.
They just need a deal, similar to Apple's deal with the music publishing companies. They will just send a cheque in the mail every month for the books sold out of a publishers catalogue.
And you know what? I would buy books that way. My Sony CLIE is
Not indexed - not sold (Score:4, Insightful)
When you make a google print search, you get a box in the left for each hit, with suggestions where you can buy the book.
Sure, some people will not buy the book because they can get the small part they need from the scanned pages. But a lot more people will only know the boox exists because they find it with Google Print, and if the book is any good, some of them will buy it.
Books are not like music, most people will prefer the analog version over an online version where you can search your way to scanned extracts.
I expect very few publishers to "opt-out" of the index.
Re:10-15 year copyright limits? (Score:2)
The "knowledge" may be free, but the copyright will be in effect for at least another half century or so.
If you are saying that copyright should be 10-15 years after first publication, then I fully agree with you. But that's not what the law says right now.
Re:10-15 year copyright limits? (Score:1)
So Hollywood only needs to wait 10 years to turn your novel into a Will Smith movie without paying you?
Re:10-15 year copyright limits? (Score:2)
Furthermore, I doubt many people are motivated to write novels so that they can get turned into movies by Hollywood, and novels that are written with that goal in mind tend to suck.