Second Google Suit Over Print Library Project 354
linumax writes "The Association of American Publishers, an organization of book publishers including Pearson Plc's Penguin unit and McGraw-Hill sued Google over its plan to create a digital Web library of printed books. The Association of American Publishers sued Wednesday after talks broke down with Google over copyright issues raised by the Google Print Library Project. Publishers say Google will infringe copyrights unless it gets advance permission for the scanning. The suit is the second by the publishing industry against Google's library plans and underscores the worries sparked by Google's expansion beyond Web search." From the article: "Google, which is working with five of the world's great libraries (Stanford, Harvard and Michigan university libraries, the New York Public Library and the Bodleian library in Oxford) to digitise their collections, stopped scanning copyrighted books in August after protests from publishers. However, it intends to resume its work next month."
Won't matter for long (Score:4, Interesting)
When this happens, books will end up on P2P just like movies, music, porn, and images. Just as P2P helps people find interesting musicians and performers, it will help people find interesting writers and authors.
No one can stop it. The big delay was caused by lack of available hardware to handle the intensive scanning and converting. We've seen software that can use a webcam or cellcam to scan documents quickly. This is processor performance driven. PCs aren't getting slower.
5 huge libraries and a multibillion dollar corporation can not compete with hundreds of millions of end users volunteering a few hours a year to copy their favorite books. The entire published collection of books for the last hundred years could be online by 2007.
Google should be embraced by publishers, not sued. Google could track interest, topically sort similar novel(list)s, and provide a great research tool and froogle-to-buy source.
If the RIAA had iTunes before Napster, who knows where we'd be. If the MPAA embraced e-distribution at a reasonable price and quality, the same is true.
People don't become pirates for financial reasons of theft, but of supply and demand. Hundreds of millions of BT users would rather pay $1 than waste hundreds of hours on low quality, low speed, high risk piracy.
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:4, Informative)
We're already practically there. Books already appear on P2P just like all of everything else. I downloaded a book just this weekend in fact, completely infringing the copyright in the process. I don't feel a shred of guilt, however, because I can't buy the book I want here yet (hardback only, paperback release date seems to vary between some time next month up to a year away). It's the 11th book in a series, I have 1-10 sitting on the shelf, but I'm not gonna buy a completely oversized hardback to continue the series.
So yeah, I'm guilty as sin. But who am I really hurting, since I have the cash in my pocket and am willing to exchange it for something that just doesn't exist yet? And which I 100% guaranteed *will* buy when it does?
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:5, Funny)
If you are talking about Wheel of Time, I have found that it's much easier just reading the plot summaries or the stuff at book-a-minute [rinkworks.com]. After all, nothing much has happened lately
no kidding (way OT) (Score:2)
Potential spoilers below.
I personally believe that Jordan got called out on the Demandred/Taim thread, and wrenched the wheel around because of the forums "getting it right". As such, he lost control and the muses now punish him.
Martin's Song of Ice and Fire is far superior epic fantasy anyway. 3 more weeks till Feast For Crows!!!! *drools*
Re:no kidding (way OT) (Score:2)
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
You are justifying what you already know is wrong. If you wanted to read the book, drop the damn cash for it. It's 20 bucks at most borders, hardly enough to break you, and it's not like R Jordan doesn't deserve it.
And the book is awsome, btw. Well worth the money.
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
I'm working on a book myself, hoping to bec
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
The best commissions come in reprint licensing for groups or retail direct editions (50% commissions).
Hard cover advances can be high, but if you don't earn your advance in sales, it comes out of your paperback commissions.
Re:You *can* buy it. (Score:2)
I don't care about the price. I care about buying something I want, and I will when they see fit to release it.
Re:You *can* buy it. (Score:2)
Actually you have already admitted you will commit a criminal act to get what you want, when you want it. Rather than waiting for when they release it in the format they release it. So tell me, how is that electronic copy going to look on your bookshelf?
Re:You *can* buy it. (Score:2)
Secondly, are you deliberately misunderstanding me or am I just coming across completely wrong?
*I WILL BE BUYING THIS BOOK AS SOON AS IT IS RELEASED IN THE SAME FORMAT AS THE OTHER 11 I LEGALLY OWN*
But, since publishers decide to go for the people who can't resist buying these things as soon as they come out, they set the paperback release way after the hardback. So to answer your question in a different manner, the paperback will look just fine on my boo
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
What did I steal? Someone else paid for the book, (scanned/ocrred/retyped/whatever), and I downloaded it. Copyright infringement, hardly the same as theft. And I've already legally purchased books 1-10, and the preque
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
So you say. Until then, you've ripped off.
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:3)
This is why publishers are against google, as well as all the authors. They already make only pennies an hour when you figure out the time it takes to write a book versus the money paid. To have to give everything away for free? That wo
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:4, Interesting)
I could get about 4 cents per word for some online zines, or $240 for 3 hours.
I know many authors who make well over $50,000 per year working 25 hours a week and never selling a novel.
Novel:Story::CD:Concert
You make good money on stories and series, not novels.
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
Bullshit. You have it backwards. People digitally scanning and illegally distributing said materials will drive the books to extinction. Not the other way round.
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
That doesn't make any sense. Think about it: The vast majority of writers get paid almost nothing, and yet there are tens of thousands of people out there who want to be writers. People write for a variety of reasons, but hardly anyone writes purely to get rich. People write because they need a creative outlet, because they have a story to tell, becaus
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:4, Interesting)
You see, publishing houses act as a big filter, filtering out the bad stuff and making it easy to find the good stuff. There are thousands of people who want to play pro sports too. Doesn't mean they're any good at it.
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2, Insightful)
How do teenagers know which kids in highschool are the cool kids? Are the teachers standing out in the hallways pointing them out? No ... the community has built its own methods (cliques, etc) for deciding who is popular and making them
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
It's obvious you can't read, because the shelves of Barnes & Noble are chock full of obvious counterexamples.
Mod parent up! Its NOT FLAMEBAIT (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
Well, there is no way no-holds-barred book copying will ever become legal, so don't worry about it. But I hope there is still some way to harness the advantages of digital media - economy, searchability, and easy distribution - for all the information currently trapped in books. You might balk at the assertion that information is "trapped" in books, bu
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2, Insightful)
Considering that writers are the least paid of all professions, this would pretty much put an end to writing professionally if what you say comes to pass. Remember that few authors make more than 20 grand a year, and that includes the majority of best selling authors as well.
Authors that make less than $20k/year simply don't write good books. I can't see many people jumping at the chance to read a bad book just because they can get it for free.
This is why publishers are against google, as well as all
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
But the system only gives small amounts out for free, helping the user search through a book while stopping them from reading the whole thing.
As I enjoy reading, as this is clearly not an aid to piracy, as this clearly doesn'
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
I appear to have repeated myself. Blast. This is what I get for not proof-reading things.
As an Author, I agree (Score:5, Insightful)
When this happens, books will end up on P2P just like movies, music, porn, and images. Just as P2P helps people find interesting musicians and performers, it will help people find interesting writers and authors.
As an author, I couldn't agree more.
Most people want to curl up with a good book and read in comfort, lying in bed, on their couch, in their recliner (cracking fire and comfortable cup of tea/coffee/hot chocolate optional). A few folks don't mind sitting in front of a computer to read, but the rest of us like good old fashioned, physical books in our hands, and what Google is doing is not only NOT a threat to the sale of traditional bound books, it is a boon.
What it isn't a boon for is old guard publishers having a stranglehold on exposure anymore, meaning that self-published, POD, and other less traditional forms of publishing gain more leverage in attracting interested eyes, without having to somehow get ahold of that coveted shelf space in a brick-and-mortor store.
Not that I don't covet that for my novel (I do), but the more accessible the information is to those looking for it, the more people will buy the physical version of the book.
The AAR has its head up its ass, and win-or-lose on this particular lawsuit, they and their constituents are going to lose bigtime if they don't update their mentality to fit with the technological reality of today, and begin exploiting the opportunities it offers.
Re:As an Author, I agree (Score:2)
Re:As an Author, I agree (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm offering to negotiate zero advance for a higher percentage (2.5% more) and control over online first publishing. My published friends and editors I know said its suicide. Yet I know the nove
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
USian associations... (Score:2)
Demand for books is far less than music (Score:2)
For example, I scanned and OCR'ed several of my favorite books and made the files available on Kazaa. Years later, there hasn't been one single download of the book files in ASCII that I've put on Kazaa. People simply aren't interested.
The published book format is a culture
Re:Demand for books is far less than music (Score:2)
1. The books you find to be "favorite" either aren't mainstream enough, or people don't have the same tastes. This, of course, is debatable on so many different levels, and isn't my key argument.
2. The few people (like myself) who have searched for books, get disappointed when they can't find exactly what they want, when they want it (as opposed to MP3 files, of which there is an almost limitless s
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2, Insightful)
For music, you have your MP3 player or burn a CD -- the user experience is pretty much the same as for other music media. For movies, you can make a VCD or watch it on the computer itself, the user experience is not as good as a regular cable or satt show or DVD, but somewhat comparable. For books, though, maybe some people could use a PDA, but it's just not a comparable experience to a real book that you can carry anywhere
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:3, Interesting)
What the publishers are really up in arms about is losing money over new books.
In the google blog, it was noted that at any given time only 20% of all books are in print, 20% are in the public domain. That leaves 60% that are not in print, and aren't in the public doamin.
What Google is doing is giving people access to those books in a limited manner so they can discover the information they need in a book they couldn't easily access (out of print).
What the publishers see is:
Booming market for
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
http://www.gutenberg.org/ [gutenberg.org]
What you're talking about isn't very different than the army of proopfreaders that volunteer their time.
~D
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:5, Funny)
Unfortunately, none of them volunteer their time to Slashdot.
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
If e-books were freely available online, it would be advantageous for the end
Re:Won't matter for long (Score:2)
Wrong. Every freely made purchase or transaction is performed by two "greedy" parties. Both sides gain something valuable. If they don't both win, the transaction neve happens.
Demanding that someone release their copyrighted works in a form acceptable to you is selfish. Demanding that they do so for a price you deem "fair" is selfish and greedy, as is obtaining it ill
So...... (Score:2, Insightful)
Guess we need to outlaw coppiers in libraries...
Or, we could post statments on them! (Score:2)
Re:So...... (Score:2)
The level to which the copying can be taken and purposely distributed without consent is vastly different when it becomes digital.
Re:So...... (Score:2)
A Pyrrhic victory (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a monumental waste of money.
How is this different from a library? (Score:2)
Re:How is this different from a library? (Score:5, Informative)
For example, if I were to look up: "JubJub Bird", it would return something like this:
-----------
Jabberwocky, Lewis Carroll (from Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There, 1872)
"Beware the Jabberwock, my son! The jaws that bite, the claws that catch! Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun the frumious Bandersnatch!"
-----------
Now is this giving away the entire contents of this copyrighted work? No. It is merely giving the searcher a hint of where to look for more information. In order to give away all of the information in a copyrighted text, one would have to know exactly what to search in sentence after sentence of that text. So it really isn't giving away anything. It most assuredly isn't giving away more information that Amazon.com does when you can open up the book and look at a few sample pages.
In the same way that Google offers a searchable catalog of online web information, it will now offer a super-catalog search for library contents. I, for one, think that this will be an invaluable resource for anyone who does academic research, or a person who merely wants to know all of the references on a particular subject and relevant resources. Have some forsight, publishers of the world! This will only increase your profits when people purchase relevant texts to their interests.
greenphreak
Google Print is not evil (PITA to use, mebbe) (Score:2, Informative)
I discovered this as I tried to read parts of a fairly rec
Who cares? (Score:3, Funny)
hwah?, Pat Schroeder on point? (Score:5, Insightful)
I once almost collided with Pat Schroeder crossing the street in downtown Denver. Maybe I should have (we were both on foot, btw).
I'm surprised Pat Schroeder is involved with or leading the charge in attempts to throttle Google. She offers tepid reasoning (probably not enough prep time spent with handlers) (from the article) :
She's right! This does go far beyond creating a digital version of a card catalog! Google's super-sized revved up digital card catalog qualifies as a godsend to the publishing industry.
The ability to do Google indexed book searches will spur reading, and sales, not muffle it. How many slashdot readers have been thankful for the Amazon.com feature of letting you peek inside their books? Many times this has been the feature giving me the final nudge to buy (though there also have been times where that nudged me the other direction).
When people start "discovering" books with Google's book searches, the very worst thing that would happen would be that people would be briefly exposed to books they otherwise might not have. But for "searchers" who find an interesting book, they won't be ripping the publishers off by printing (stealing) or downloading (stealing) these books, since Google isn't offering that as an option.
And assuming for the moment some figure out how to download a copy, they're left with a book on their computer... not convenient to read (e-books, still on respirator), and way too expensive to print (and aesthetically "not a book").
So, the most likely result would be a library visit, or purchase.
Come on Pat!, think again.
Re:hwah?, Pat Schroeder on point? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not. Pat Scroeder:Book Publishers::Hillary Rosen:RIAA::Jack Valenti:MPAA.
Okay, Hillary and Jack both stepped down, but you know what I mean. All three of them are shills/whores for their respective employers/pimps.
I mean, this article [washingtonpost.com] goes back to 2001:
Re:hwah?, Pat Schroeder on point? (Score:2)
Re:hwah?, Pat Schroeder on point? (Score:2)
I think you nailed it on the head. What would happen if people started thinking about books - even reading parts of them
Re:hwah?, Pat Schroeder on point? (Score:2)
Guess what?, copying a book would far EXCEED the cost of buying one!
In some cases that's true, but not in others. It's not true in the textbook market, where an 800
'Clearly Illegal?' What about fair use? (Score:3, Insightful)
Schroeder, on the other hand, knows perfectly well that Google's Fair Use argument is plausible. It won't necessarily win in court, but it is no way a clear loser. Schroeder does what all big publishers do: pretend that Fair Use doesn't exist, and hope that they will get people to abandon their Fair Use rights.
Re:hwah?, Pat Schroeder on point? (Score:2)
What is the concern? Making copies of a work is the exclusive right of the Copyright holder. Google is infringinging on the rights of AAP members. That's why they are suing. That piracy of books isn't widespread or is more expensive than an official copy is irrelevant.
She's right! This does go far beyond creating a digital version of a card catalog! Google's super-sized rev
I blame it on... (Score:2, Funny)
Like a mime... (Score:2, Interesting)
Rooting for Google (Score:4, Interesting)
Celsius 232.78 (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Celsius 232.78 (Score:4, Informative)
High and mighty (Score:5, Informative)
Re:High and mighty (Score:2)
Of course not. Why should they? When an author signs with a publisher, they sign their work away to the publisher. Most of their work becomes pre paid and they merely become another worker, doing what they do best largely for someone else's benefit.
If an author wants to retain rights to their work then they should self publish instead of "selling out" to a publisher. Otherwise they are nothing more than work for hire. You have no rights to the source code you write when w
Clueless publishers (Score:5, Insightful)
Books are a bit like software, and the try before you buy model works well. I have a hard time imagining most people deciding to read the entirety of a long book on their computer, even if it's available for free. I can imagine quite a few people looking at a new book online and using that as the basis for choosing to buy the book if they're going to read it though.
Fortunately, at least a few companies display a bit of understanding. The people initiating these lawsuits should read the introduction Here [baen.com], and then check Baen's profits, and note that they're still in business and doing reasonably well, thank you very much.
Of course, everybody else should go there simply to check out some books for free, and (perhaps) to support Baen Books for being decent people and doing good things.
--
The universe is a figment of its own imagination.
Re:Clueless publishers (Score:2)
Re:Clueless publishers (Score:2)
I wonder how long it will be before the population of
Re:Clueless publishers (Score:3, Interesting)
Is it? The argument that this is fair use is an interesting one, and might just succeed.
If it doesn't, we can kiss goodbye to Internet search engines, because I see no difference at all, at least from a legal standpoint, between what they are doing with books and what they have been doing with web sites all along.
I'm not reading the articles... but... (Score:3, Insightful)
So, how is Google any different, except that it's potentially more massive, EVEN faster than the library system I'm used to, and available to even more people?? It's just an extension of the concept that's been around in my city in "snail-mail" form for quite a while now. Keep it up and they're liable to piss off a vast majority of the population of the US if the laws about copyrights keep getting extended further and further away from the original intent of copyright law.
No, this isn't my most well-though-out post ever, but I wanted to highlight this facet of the debate over Google's LIbrary Project.
Re:I'm not reading the articles... but... (Score:2)
It sounds like the difference is that the library system has its legal ducks in a row, whereas Google decided to go ahead on the basis of We're Google And We're The Future and let the chips fall where they may.
Incidentally, do you really think you have the only city with a unified library circulation? They have that pretty much everywhere in the US
Re:I'm not reading the articles... but... (Score:2)
Re:I'm not reading the articles... but... (Score:2)
You know, without being ironic, you might consider not telling people about this feature available at most urban library systems. It would be reason that the media corporations use to shut down the public libraries (or reduce them to only being able to distribute non-copyrighted materials).
However, on the
It is not the right thing to a certain extent (Score:2, Insightful)
Some people before my post said, pc's are not getting any slower and scanners any weaker and this is supposed to happen sooner or later. Well, I beg to differ. One person scanning his own, paid, copyrig
copying is not violating (Score:4, Insightful)
While protected rights, naturally lead to incentives - protected incentives do not naturally lead to rights. Perhaps somebody feels violated when you freely copy, then again perhaps plantation masters feel violated if you steal, oops I mean free, slaves from the plantation. That is what I mean. Property and incentive are not an ends in themselves, to be just they need to derive from the real world - like the fact that not everybody can use the same resources at the same time, but with information they can!
Copyrights are particualrly evil because they have the effect of stealing away our culture and giving it to hollywood. They also have an effect, that to secure them, you need to microregulate the internet and everybody that uses it. They have an effect that leads to anti-trust behavior in large software companies, and tend to make the information itself more valuable then the people who provide the services. The cost of having them in the information age is simply too high and they can not survive the information age any more than micro-controll of the labor market (slavery) could survive the industrial revolution.
What a load of twaddle (Score:3, Insightful)
You're forgetting that if the author isn't protected from theft, he/she will be less inclined to produce the culture that's being "stolen." Creation takes work and that work needs to be compensated otherwise it'll cease. Slavery arises when a man is required to work for nothing which from the jist of your post, is exactly what you think creators should be paid. After all, it costs them n
Speaking of twaddle.... (Score:4, Informative)
Yes. But so what? The goals of society are to both encourage the creation of works and to have those works be in the public domain. While we can cause a lot of creation to occur by slightly delaying entrance into the public domain, and only granting a modicum of protection even during that initial period, there does come a point of diminishing returns. In fact, we eventually reach a point where granting more protection reduces the amount of creation.
So there will always be unprotected authors, because some works just aren't worth protecting to the extent that it would take to cause them to be created.
Furthermore, we should be responsible with copyright policy. We should provide no more incentive than the minimum amount necessary to get the maximum amount of net public benefit (i.e. the benefit of creation minus the harm caused by their not being in the public domain). To provide more of an incentive would be wasteful.
Slavery arises when a man is required to work for nothing which from the jist of your post, is exactly what you think creators should be paid.
Failure to give artists an economic incentive to create works is hardly comparable to forcing them to create. If artists aren't incentivized, they can be accountants or something. There's no one cracking a whip over them, so please stop with your useless hyperbole.
It's not the protection from theft that's evil, it's the theft itself that's evil.
It's not theft, and neither is evil. Copyright is utilitarian and essentially amoral.
Although if there were a moral component, it'd be in favor of pirates, who spread and enjoy knowledge and help ensure that works will survive, as opposed to authors, who act as gatekeepers.
Re:What a load of twaddle (Score:4, Insightful)
Inventors get seventeen years (actually it varies) of protection. Is there a reason that authors need "lifetime plus 75 years"? I have only the greatest respect for authors (with some exceptions...) but I think the transistor, antibiotics, and the airplane have more of an impact on my life than Gore Vidal and Dave Barry.
Many of the works that are currently on the shelves will NEVER go into the public domain. And there is one thing authors need more than anything else--people that love reading. A large free corpus is a good way to build that.
Sonny Bono owns you (Score:3, Insightful)
There is gutenberg project which is slowly converting Public domain text into the digital platform but doing it w/o violating the copyrights.
What happens to PG once all notable English-language works first published on or before December 1922 have been scanned and digitally republished?
Re:It is not the right thing to a certain extent (Score:2)
Hmmm...... (Score:2, Insightful)
By libraries, helped by Google. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is more like an effort by the libraries, and Google is basically under contract to do the heavy lifting of scanning and technology, because they're good at such grand data projects. Traditional libraries simply aren't scaled and don't have the budgets to do it all by themselves. There's major cost savings in consolidation and expense-sharing. Why scan 7 times when you can scan once?
It seems like the publishers are really aiming for a for-fee privatized electronic library system, cutting out traditional non-profit libraries.
How can Google get away with this? (Score:2, Interesting)
What Exactly is The Difference? (Score:2)
Don't you guys think.. (Score:2, Insightful)
To pre-emptively tackle some arguments here... (Score:3, Informative)
1. Google is NOT doing something new and revolutionary, they are instead extending what is already a good idea and already extant. Sample chapters have been up on the 'net for years. The ability to search for millions of books in dozens of different libraries at once by particular keywords has existed in university libraries for at least a decade, if not longer. Project Gutenberg (sp?) has been digitizing out-of-print public domain books for years as well. Google is extending this general idea, but they did not invent it. And, if they are stopped by these lawsuits, it will NOT bring the world to a halt, damage authors or the publishing industry, damage readers, create some weird heirarchy of those who have information and those who don't, or anything of the sort (in fact, we already have an overload of information in modern society).
2. The argument that what was in the first draft of the U.S. Constitution is exactly what copyright should be is extremely flawed, both historically and logically. It is flawed logically because the argument revolves around the U.S. Constitution, which has little or nothing to do with international law and the Berne Convention (and the libraries in question have books by authors from around the world). It is historically flawed because the first draft of the U.S. Constitution was an 18th century document written by 18th century people for an 18th century world, and society, including the situation of authors, has changed since then. There's a good reason why Jeffersonian democracy hasn't existed since about the 1830s. Copyright may require some tweaking to function properly in this new age of the Internet, but regressing two centuries is not the answer at all.
3. The main issue here revolves around whether Google asked for permission from the copyright holders before scanning. And, both morally and legally speaking, they should have. And, the fact is that if they had asked first, they quite possibly would have had the publishers and authors bending over backwards to help, because it IS a good idea. However, the ends do not justify the means, and quite frankly, I don't think they ever have.
Now, those issues aside, there are some good issues to raise - how do you protect copyright in this digital world? At what point is something no longer fair use when you're dealing with credited electronic excerpts? How does copyright need to change in order to balance the needs and rights of the author with the needs and rights of the reader?
Imagine a web without Google. (Score:2)
And, if they are stopped by these lawsuits, it will NOT bring the world to a halt
Really? The majority of public web searches are performed through Google. If Google is successfully sued and is ordered to pay $150,000 statutory damages per infringed work, then Google may have to liquidate all its assets and close down. How can the World Wide Web as we know it keep going without Google Search?
Re:Imagine a web without Google. (Score:2)
Google is no longer significantly better than any of the other major search engines. Yahoo, MSN, A9 and probably numerous others offer equivelant capabilities. If Google closed down tomorrow, it wouldn't mean much for the 'Net as a whole.
Penguin are IP nazis (Score:4, Interesting)
Case in point - Beatrix Potter - the cute bunny children's stories - Penguin owns the company that publishes Beatrix Potter books.
Nearly all of these stories are in the public domain, and even a lot of the artwork. However, you try to publish any of it... They have trademarks on all the character names and images, so although the copyright is public domain, the character names count and images count as trademarks of the company so you can't use them.
Doesn't seem right to me that a company should be able to prevent public domain works being published because they have trademarked the character names...
Re:Penguin are IP nazis (Score:2)
Google's Response (Score:4, Informative)
I'm a consumer (Score:2)
Not Invented Here! (Score:4, Insightful)
Free scan, free search, free marketing. Of course the book publishers would be against it. It might mess up their carefully constructed marketing plans by creating a demand they were previously unaware of
Google is doing EVIL.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Google is doing EVIL.... (Score:3, Informative)
The only books displayed in full-text were those in the public domain (out of copyright). You only got exerpts of books that were copyrighted. But that's not the heart of the case. The publishers are suing google over the index they're creating, scanning the books and making a copy for themselves without clearing copyright. They're not doing evil, there's legitimate issues here, like whether or not this index a legit extention of the library's
Re:Google is going about this all wrong (Score:2)
I'd rather see Google fight a terrible set of laws violating our Constitutional rights, or work to repeal the horrific copyright laws which are antiquated anyway.
Until Disney buys Google.
Re:No Copyrighted Books?? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No Copyrighted Books?? (Score:2, Insightful)
You're kidding, right? Have you never heard of the amazing work done by Project Gutenberg [gutenberg.org]? They have something like 16,000 books and counting. All digital and all in the public domain. In many ways, it's the F/OSS equivalent of Google's project.
From their site:
No Infringe. No available books. (Score:3, Informative)
Their project is different from Gutemberg.
Gutemberg projet, is about making old books freely available online. Because the *FULL* content *IS* distributed online, they restrict to texts that are
- either too old and the copyright has expired
- for author gave explicit autorisation to publish and make freely available to everyone
- are in public domain for some other reason (obviously, a public speech hasn't a copyright).
Google on the other hand, m