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Google Books Can Proceed As Supreme Court Rejects Authors Guild Appeal (bbc.com) 211

An anonymous reader writes: The Supreme Court on Monday rejected a challenge to Google's online book library -- Google Books -- from authors who complained that the project makes it harder for them to market their work. The Authors Guild and other writers had claimed that Google's scanning of their books should be deemed as copyright infringement and not fair use. The Supreme Court let stand the lower court opinion that rejected the writers' claims. The decision today means Google Books won't have to close up shop or ask publishers for permission to scan.The ruling, Mary Rasenberger, executive director of the authors group, said, "misunderstood the importance of emerging online markets for books and book excerpts. It failed to comprehend the very real potential harm to authors resulting from its decision. The price of this short-term public benefit may well be the future vitality of American culture."
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Google Books Can Proceed As Supreme Court Rejects Authors Guild Appeal

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  • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @12:49PM (#51932687) Homepage

    Google Books is not a "short-term public benefit", it's a real tangible benefit to the public. I can't tell you how many times I've found important information from Google Books on scientific topics that I otherwise wouldn't have had ready access to - even though interspersed by blank pages. I can always buy the book if I want the additional information in the missing pages - but the key point being, I would never have known that the book existed and provided the information I was looking for had it not been scanned, indexed, and shown up in Google searches.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by vux984 ( 928602 )

      I can't tell you how many times I've found important information from Google Books on scientific topics that I otherwise wouldn't have had ready access to - even though interspersed by blank pages.

      So.. it was simultaneously important, but also not worth paying the authors anything?

      I can always buy the book if I want the additional information in the missing pages -

      How often did you though? A potential sale, as slashdot loves to point out to the music industry is NOT a sale.

      but the key point being

      That you didn't buy anything.

      I would never have known that the book existed and provided the information I was looking for had it not been scanned, indexed, and shown up in Google searches.

      True enough; there is clearly a problem that does need solving here. But perhaps google's solution here... isn't the solution.

      Perhaps being able to search google's scanned books should be a subscription service with some portion of that subscription payment going back to the authors of

      • How often did you though? A potential sale, as slashdot loves to point out to the music industry is NOT a sale.

        The chance of someone buying a book after seeing a page or two show up on google books is bigger than them buying the same book without seeing that preview.

        I'm just not sure a system that benefits you and google but not the authors is the best solution to the problem here.

        It does benefit the authors.

        • by vux984 ( 928602 )

          The chance of someone buying a book after seeing a page or two show up on google books is bigger than them buying the same book without seeing that preview.

          Says you. I for one am unlikely to buy most books that I've already got free access to all the information I need from them. In fact, that is what the original poster himself claimed... the book had "important information". he got it. he didn't buy the book.

          He can argue that not knowing about the book gives zero odds of buying it. But if hadn't been able to just take what he wanted from the book, he'd still be searching for that important information, which he might discover is in that book. And then maybe

      • How often did you though? A potential sale, as slashdot loves to point out to the music industry is NOT a sale.

        No, it more that a download/viewing isn't necessarily a potential sale.

        for example, I might look at google or amazon's showing of a $1000 book, but I'm not going to be buying it, whether I can see it or not.

        In all actuality, consider it closer to the original bookstore model - unless I'm ordering in something special, I can flip open nearly any book in the store and look at any page I want to. No limits.

        Are they scared we'll decide their book is crap?

        • by vux984 ( 928602 )

          Are they scared we'll decide their book is crap?

          No. They are scared you'll just see it as "important information" then take what you need without paying; which is exactly what the post I responded to said he did.

          for example, I might look at google or amazon's showing of a $1000 book, but I'm not going to be buying it, whether I can see it or not.

          And therefore? They should let you read it, and still not pay? While you benefit from that, nobody else does though.

          In all actuality, consider it closer to the original bookstore model - unless I'm ordering in something special, I can flip open nearly any book in the store and look at any page I want to. No limits.

          Well.. there actually are pragmatic limits. Several of them. The bookstore doesn't really want you just sitting there treating their retail shelves as a library. You are welcome to browse. But if you brought in your laptop, a scanne

          • And therefore? They should let you read it, and still not pay?

            They should offer people a reasonable preview so they can decide that it may be worth their money.

            • by vux984 ( 928602 )

              They should offer people a reasonable preview so they can decide that it may be worth their money.

              Isn't it ultimately up to them whether they allow a preview or not, and how "reasonable" that preview is?

              Just as its ultimately up to you whether to buy it or not based on the information, reviews, and whatever preview they did make available.

              How on earth is it up to you and/or google to decide how much of a preview they make available?

          • The bookstore doesn't really want you just sitting there treating their retail shelves as a library. You are welcome to browse. But if you brought in your laptop, a scanner/camera, set yourself up on a desk and started doing your "research". Taking notes, scanning/photographic pages getting everything you need, and then putting the books back. They'd ask you to leave.

            Did you ever go into a large US bookstore in the late '90s/early '00s? If you did, you would see several people reading books from cover to

            • by vux984 ( 928602 )

              Did you ever go into a large US bookstore in the late '90s/early '00s? If you did, you would see several people reading books from cover to cover. The staff did not prevent this activity.

              Ok. But "reading books cover to cover" is definitely not the same thing as what I said " if you brought in your laptop, a scanner/camera, set yourself up on a desk and started doing your "research". Taking notes, scanning/photographic pages getting everything you need, and then putting the books back."

              See those are quite different, and I never saw anybody doing that in a book store in 90s and 00s.

              But sure lets talk briefly about your scenario. It is quite different from google books -- just for starters eve

    • Funny. I always thought the government should fund and run things that were a tangible benefit for the public, not a private company that can "Ministry of Truth" whatever content they want out of existence now or in the future.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by dAzED1 ( 33635 )

      " I would never have known that the book existed"

      For people born before 1990, there was this thing called "research" which took more than 5 seconds to do, thus its need to be described as an actual activity. The work you were doing was, at the time, leagues beyond what the AIs could do. We'd go to a thing called a "library" where books were actually purchased, thus the author actually getting paid. We'd look through these "books" and find the information we needed.

      I'm all for progress, but a paradigm shi

      • Don't worry, Google's other projects of AI and robots will "destroy the future" way faster than anything their doing with Google Books...
      • by religionofpeas ( 4511805 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:37PM (#51933039)

        We'd go to a thing called a "library" where books were actually purchased, thus the author actually getting paid.

        The number of books sold to libraries is so small that the authors could perhaps buy a cup of coffee with their profits.

        We'd look through these "books" and find the information we needed.

        Yes, and we also went to record stores to listen to music, and we'd buy folded paper maps, and we'd look up phone numbers in the yellow pages.

        As someone else said, this is just Google being greedy - they could have come up with some sort of agreement with the authors that allowed them to do it via a subscription service

        So, why didn't the authors and/or publishers set up a system for finding books ?

        • by dAzED1 ( 33635 )
          Are authors supposed to come up with a system for translating their books as well? Or reading their books via whatever your electric device of choice is? They write a particular body of text, which is in theory copyright-protected. If someone else wants to devise a service, that should happen in a way that respects that an author did actual work to create the body of text. If it's not worth it to pay for reading the body of text, then it probably shouldn't be used in research anyway. Also, somehow we'v
          • Are authors supposed to come up with a system for translating their books as well? Or reading their books via whatever your electric device of choice is?

            They already have. Many books are being translated and sold in other countries, and they are available as e-books.

            Also, somehow we've managed to find books for a very long time without shoveling money into the gullets of Google.

            Not very effectively. I live in a densely populated country, and going to a well stocked library and actually finding a book that I want takes the better part of a day. In addition, when I borrow a book from a library I get the full text, and don't have to pay the author anything. At least when people find a book on Google, there's a better chance they'll end up buying a copy.

            • by dAzED1 ( 33635 )

              That sound you just heard going over your head...let me explain what it was. First, while some books are translated, last I heard the author's guild doesn't own amazon or adobe. Second, authors will sometimes translate things, but even when they do it's certainly not to every language. That job is generally done by someone of that other language group that wants to share it with others who read that language. The salient point was that the job of the author is simply to create the body of text - not to

              • The salient point was that the job of the author is simply to create the body of text - not to distribute it, translate it, or such

                That's how it used to work, yes. There's no reason why authors can't find better ways now, especially since the cost of electronically distributing books is so much less than printing paper books.

                Google is making money off the book without giving money to the author

                Google is providing free advertising. It's probably worth more than the handful of books that were bought by libraries.

        • by dAzED1 ( 33635 )
          btw, we generally didn't go to record stores to listen to music...we went there to buy records. ;) While we may have listened to music while there, it wasn't the primary purpose.
          • we generally didn't go to record stores to listen to music...we went there to buy records. ;)

            We listened to albums in the store to decide if it was worth buying.

            • by dAzED1 ( 33635 )
              Unless we had already heard it on the radio, at a friend's house, or where-ever else - sure. Sometimes. Sometimes we just liked the band well enough that we bought the record on the day it was released. But previewing was not the reason we went there, in general. Heck, many record stores I remember wouldn't let you preview like that anyway. There wasn't a real alternative; you either bought it and had it, or you didn't buy it and you didn't have it (or you didn't buy it, and had a very low quality repr
      • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:48PM (#51933155)
        As one of those born-before-1990 people, you were still limited to the editorial choices made by your librarian or library staff, or the city-council or schoolboard or college board that made policy decisions affecting the library. It was also difficult to evaluate the worthiness of the book itself, there were not as many sources to use to find out if the author was truly an expert in the subject or if the author was pushing an agenda that ran toward fringe/junk science.

        Then there was the time-element. It simply took a long time to peruse the material. It was often not possible to search the text of the book to find something relevant, one had to hope that the author and editor did their jobs well and organized chapters and subjects in a logical fashion.

        Don't get me wrong, there are still a lot of veracity problems with modern Internet-based techniques, and there are still problems with junk work and authors masquerading as legitimate that are merely trying to push an agenda, but it's a lot easier than it used to be to get to that part of evaluating the work, instead of spending so much time just trying to find the works in the first place.
        • Indeed, doing deep research on a topic often involved going to several different libraries across the state, and if you didn't live in a state with a nice library system, tough.
      • by dlenmn ( 145080 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:55PM (#51933205)

        For people born before 1990, there was this thing called "research" which took more than 5 seconds to do, thus its need to be described as an actual activity.

        The high time cost of "research" before everything was electronic meant that research was often lower quality. (By research, I mean "looking up sources" -- not "doing science" in general.) I'm a physicist, and it's very interesting to look back at old papers (which I do often because it's easy thanks to the internet). Old papers tended to cite few other papers, probably because looking up references was time consuming, and there are only so many hours in a day. E.g. the paper I'm working on cites over 100 other works. Many older papers don't even cite 20 other works.

        For example, I was interested in a specific topic (a finite-difference time-domain solution to the Schroedinger equation), so I started digging. It turns out that the technique was "introduced" no less than four times -- basically once a decade since the 1950s. Each paper which "introduced" the technique did not cite previous work on the technique. That's both a dick move and a waste of time and effort. People should have been refining the technique instead of wasting time by rediscovering it. You also see this in even older work. E.g. the "Fokker–Planck equation" is also known as the "Kolmogorov forward equation" because Kolmogorov didn't know that the equation had already been developed.

        I wouldn't have been able to learn about the history of the technique if not for electronic records. This research still doesn't take 5 seconds to do. I spend days doing it and discover much more than anyone in 1990 could.

        • The low time of research nowadays has lowered the barrier of entry so that anyone can write sh*t. Also, Independent (re)discovery is a good thing - it means that several sets of brains have come to the same conclusion.
      • " I would never have known that the book existed"

        For people born before 1990, there was this thing called "research" which took more than 5 seconds to do, thus its need to be described as an actual activity. The work you were doing was, at the time, leagues beyond what the AIs could do. We'd go to a thing called a "library" where books were actually purchased, thus the author actually getting paid. We'd look through these "books" and find the information we needed.

        I'm all for progress, but a paradigm shift needs to be done in such a way that it doesn't destroy the future. There will be little purpose for authors to do the work, if you can then yank the snippets you need (likely out of context, because hey - who has time to actually read the whole paper?) without giving them any money. As someone else said, this is just Google being greedy - they could have come up with some sort of agreement with the authors that allowed them to do it via a subscription service, or such. Instead, they decided to give away someone else's work for free.

        Yes, and research using only physical books and the citations in the back is what I did in graduate school. But, you know, what, I like having both print and electronic versions of books. It's a nice, new tool that helps and makes things easier. And, I can find lots of obscure things in an electronic library that would not even be available in a physical library.

      • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

        "We'd go to a thing called a "library" where books were actually purchased, thus the author actually getting paid. We'd look through these "books" and find the information we needed."
        Really? I graduated high school in 1983 so yes I am old but I remember using the library as being an exercise in frustration. I was interested in aviation, chemistry, cars, and computers. The books at my local and high school library where few in number and very outdated. If I wanted to read fiction it was fine. I wanted to rea

      • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

        We'd go to a thing called a "library" where books were actually purchased, thus the author actually getting paid.

        How do you think Google acquired the book to be scanned?

    • You can only do that, #1, if you can find which book has the info you want & #2, if it is available somewhere new or used.

      I think that authors need to set up their own online stores and sell their own copies if they intend to make money off their out of date books. Of course, many authors have signed away the right to do that.

  • by harvey the nerd ( 582806 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @12:49PM (#51932693)
    one small step for mankind....

    Now we need open standards for multiple archival sites to steward and prevent the complete corruption or loss of the Google archive as the world churns.
    Most libraries are eventually destroyed in time.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Copyright without registration isn't copyright at all. If nobody knows what is copyrighted and who owns the copyright, how are you supposed to find out?

    • by Verdatum ( 1257828 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:02PM (#51932761)
      If you managed to infringe on a work, it should mean that you either had access to something that you didn't create, thus implying it is copyrighted until you can show otherwise, or it shouldn't be something worthy of copyright. A better question would be, how do you license a copyrighted work if you are unable to contact the property holder? This question has been a major issue that the Google Books plan has had to deal with, and what prevented it from putting everything it had ever scanned on sale, as it had originally intended (which would've been REALLY NICE).
    • Copyright without registration isn't copyright at all.

      Not true. Creative works are copyrighted by default. The author/artist does not need to take any action for their work to be protected. Registering with the USPTO gives you additional protections, and is usually necessary to actually file a claim, but the registering can happen after the infringement.

      If nobody knows what is copyrighted and who owns the copyright, how are you supposed to find out?

      If you don't know something is public domain, then you should assume it is not. Nearly all books have copyright notices. In practice, it is usually not that hard to find out when works were created.

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @12:58PM (#51932743) Journal
    Very Real Potential Harm is the same as no actual harm. So good.
  • by ilsaloving ( 1534307 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:04PM (#51932785)

    On behalf of everyone who has ever set foot in a Library, or tried to obtain a book but was no longer in print, and the publisher won't make it available in any format whatsoever, I say...

    Go fuck yourself.

    • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

      Every once in awhile you will find a gem in a used book store.
      I found a book on navy strategy written in 1944 and from the stamp was part of a US subs library. It had notes written in the margins asking things like, "how does this apply now that we have nuclear weapons?"
      The other book was on fighter design from 1943 written by the founder of Republic aircraft.
      No one is going to publish those books today but they could be really interesting to people like me.

  • by supernova87a ( 532540 ) <kepler1@@@hotmail...com> on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:05PM (#51932791)
    Authors want everything to go their way, but the reality of the power balance is that they are producers of creative works, not marketers of them. (by and large). Time to admit that the pendulum has swung to where the people/entities who can aggregate and find information are even more valuable than the ones who produce the elements of that information.

    They're unhappy if Google (or anyone) puts their entire works online, and also unhappy if Google puts just snippets of their works online. What do they want, to be able to pick and choose exactly what passages get to be indexed and put into search?

    The heart of the matter is that this is a dispute over the money to be gathered from selling creative works, not the incentives for creating that work (which many people incorrectly buy the story that losing patent/copyright protection will strip away -- I never met an author who wrote because they had copyright protection). Authors will still continue to write, artists will still continue to record -- they will simply get less margin on each book, while actually probably getting even more exposure and marketing than they would on their own (or without Google).
    • What do they want, to be able to pick and choose exactly what passages get to be indexed and put into search?

      That's not unreasonable. Although, frankly, I don't want to do that myself. I want the publisher to choose the market-tested snippets and index those.

      • The publisher is free to choose any snippets they want and publish them on their website, which will then be indexed by Google. Habeas corpus applies here, who is harmed by Google's indexes?
        • Well, a couple contradictory theories:

          The people whose copyright they violated by making another copy? Suppose an author hated a book they had written earlier. It would be impossible for them to buy and destroy every copy.

          Competitors who would have to reproduce the electronic archiving, as opposed to having the LoC owning the electronic copies and people competing on search algorithms.

      • Great idea. In fact, the source of any information should be able to choose exactly what information is available through search results. Like if a politician is arrested for solicitation of prostitution, they could choose to not release that in search results.

    • by Etherwalk ( 681268 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:13PM (#51932843)

      Authors want everything to go their way, but the reality of the power balance is that they are producers of creative works, not marketers of them. (by and large). Time to admit that the pendulum has swung to where the people/entities who can aggregate and find information are even more valuable than the ones who produce the elements of that information.

      Good God. What Universe are you living in? The power balance has NEVER favored content creators in almost any medium, and has always favored producers and aggregators. The exceptions are hugely successful artists probably three or more standard deviations above the mean in terms of demand for their work.

      • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:29PM (#51932979) Journal
        That's true, it's why authors often make only 2% of the total book price in royalties: because if the publishers (aggregators, etc) didn't advertise the product, they would make even less money.

        It's really sad how important the gatekeepers are for content production (and this includes things like the iTunes app store: good luck getting people to buy your app).
        • The thing is, the broader the market access the internet provides and the ability to search Google provides could give authors the chance to unshackle themselves from the publishers. This is why the publishers freaked out about ebooks originally and worked with Apple to price fix them above the cost of printed material. The publishers are deathly afraid that authors will direct publish and eliminate the middleman job of publisher (who also gets the lions share of profit).

          If anything the work Google is doing

          • That's a theoretical possibility, and hopefully it happens.
            For right now, it's very difficult to get a book in front of a large audience without the help of a publisher. The publisher has all the connections, all the advertising techniques and all the knowledge which authors lack.

            It really is similar to writing an app for the iTunes store: even if your app is good, usually the one with better advertising will become more popular.
          • Too bad it doesn't work that way in reality [theguardian.com]

            Self-publishing also comes under fire, he said – but this is "even less of a way of earning money from your writing if you're any good than conventional publishing".

            • The problem isn't that self-publishing doesn't work. The problem is that right now the people that self-publish are not getting proper editing done. That and companies like Amazon are allowing their systems to be abused by spammers. These are all solvable issues that are not directly related, but people like you would rather throw the baby out with the bathwater.

              Even the simplest actions like Amazon exerting simple editorial control for their 30% in the form of having the publication checked for basic gramm

      • Sorry, I meant publishers -- the power balance has shifted away from the publishers...
    • I never met an author who wrote because they had copyright protection

      Then you've met damn few authors. Most authors have these things called bills, which require money to pay.

    • The average professional published author would be better off working at a McJob [theguardian.com]. The decline in income over the last 12 years should be an eye-opener.
    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      What do they want, to be able to pick and choose exactly what passages get to be indexed and put into search?

      Please! don't give them ideas like that!

  • [The authors group said that the court] failed to comprehend the very real potential harm to authors resulting from its decision

    If I run a shoe store and somebody opens a competing shoe store next to me, that will reduce my profits and possibly even put me out of business, but that person hasn't "harmed" me. If I sell copies of data and somebody else starts offering competing copies of data, that may well reduce my profits or put me out of business, but they haven't "harmed" me. They are just competing. (Of course, under the legal system, what they are doing may be considered "harm," and it may be illegal.)

    • [The authors group said that the court] failed to comprehend the very real potential harm to authors resulting from its decision

      If I run a shoe store and somebody opens a competing shoe store next to me, that will reduce my profits and possibly even put me out of business, but that person hasn't "harmed" me. If I sell copies of data and somebody else starts offering competing copies of data, that may well reduce my profits or put me out of business, but they haven't "harmed" me. They are just competing. (Of course, under the legal system, what they are doing may be considered "harm," and it may be illegal.)

      Bad analogy to start with. It's more like if you are running a shoe-store and your next-door competitor steals 30% of your stock.

      • by jdavidb ( 449077 )
        Actually it's not like that at all. If somebody starts selling the same bits I am selling, I still have those bits. I just can't earn as much for them due to competition. Even the courts acknowledge that "theft" is not the right term for what is happening here.
  • by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:17PM (#51932867)
    How many people out there have read an entire book by searching for every page on Google?
    • How many people out there have read an entire book by searching for every page on Google?

      I actually bought a book that I found through Google Books. I only needed maybe 5 pages out of the entire book and it was such a PITA to search out each individual page i broke down and bought it. Turned out that the authors were a bunch of idiots and the book was wrong, but they have my money and so therefore Google books was a net win for those jackasses.

  • ....It failed to comprehend the very real potential harm to authors resulting from its decision.

    How can a potential harm be real harm? Until the harm is actually done it's just all hot air.

    The price of this short-term public benefit may well be the future vitality of American culture."

    This won't effect American culture. It probably will effect American publishing companies and force them to find better ways to survive than artificially inflating the prices of ebooks to $9.99 or higher when the paperback is $6.99. You know, stop being thieves and maybe we'll have sympathy for your plight?

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:24PM (#51932929)
    You write for nothing
    Google sells ads on your work
    Sharing economy
    • by xvan ( 2935999 )
      What if google adds for other works are only shown on indexation but not on the book snippets?
    • Wtf this is the second article in the row that is summarised with a haiku in the comments.

  • by irrational_design ( 1895848 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @01:40PM (#51933079)

    "The price of this short-term public benefit may well be the future vitality of American culture."
    How in the world can someone possibly say that with a straight face. I would bust up laughing before I was halfway through that line.

  • "The price of this short-term public benefit may well be the future vitality of American culture."

    Sometimes people say "black is white". But that doesn't mean there's any merit to such a claim. The only reason I can see for that quote to be mentioned is to provide a target for ridicule.

  • Author's Guild Reponse auto-translation:

    Google has lots of money and we wanted some. We are angry the court didn't recognize we are entitled to some of Google's money. We think depriving authors of part of Google's money will irreparably harm American Culture because they can't have money for all of Google's work to preserve that culture. Congress must act to eliminate this activist court ruling or we will get angry and stamp our feet more!

  • by wierd_w ( 1375923 ) on Monday April 18, 2016 @02:49PM (#51933675)

    You know, Things like this make me wonder:

    In the old days (pre internet), the only way to get a book was in the dead tree variety. Back then, the world still recognized that free public access to paid periodicals, reference materials, and even works of cultural fiction resulted in a more well rounded, better educated, and more cultured public.

    To facilitate that noble goal, exceptions to publisher exclusivity for public libraries came into being. As long as the physical books were never duplicated, just kept in good repair, and purchased from the publisher at onset, these operations were and still are perfectly legal and have provided tremendous public good.

    Now, we find ourselves in a pickle:

    These days, it is possible to purchase a "book" that has no physical substance whatsoever. Ebooks are here to stay, and this is what I wonder.

    If a person wanted to buy all those ebooks directly from the publisher, set up a digital lockout system to prevent simultanous viewing (to better approximate the book being physically checked out) do you suppose these author's guild types would consider the creation of such a digital library above board?

    Recent history with the motion picture association and the recording industry of america suggests that the answer is a resounding "FUCK NO." These people have lobbied hard to get congress to evaluate the contents as being provided as a service with a highly restrictive license, not as something that can have steward/ownership transferred. In fact, these people have lobbied hard to make any such 3rd party, after market transfers "illegal,", by forbidding them in an absurd license agreement.

    As a consequence, I feel obliged to tell these poor, wounded darlings the following:

    Either allow public access ebook checkouts for digital libraries (that bend over backwards to prevent concurrent access, and probably even additional copy protection you did not have to pay for, out of courtesy to you, free of charge) or shut the fuck up when somebody with deeper pockets than you (and can fight you in court) offers a similar modern public service.

    No, that doesn't mean "you have to be this big to make a deal with us"-- the days of that shit are over. The cost to reproduce a digital download are less than a cent per copy. There are no overhead costs beyond the initial production, and the library will be footing all subsequent bills for data retention and bandwidth for public access. The way the laws covering libraries in the US are worded, anyone can open one.

    Your lust for money is what is destroying american culture.
    Open access is what helped create it.

    I wonder, but very much doubt about the prospects of a modern lending library with digital versions. I have the firmly bases suspicion that you would consider such a modern version of a classic cultural staple to be a dire threat to your financials, because of your addiction to exclusivity, and recent binging on extended copyright terms and laws.

    I also wonder, what do you intend to replace the public library WITH, given that attendence of these august organizations is declining in the digital age, and that as a consequence, they are doomed to posterity.

    • My metro library has ebooks, and it works as you describe ie no concurrent access to titles. It is powered by a service called Overdrive.
    • In fact, these people have lobbied hard to make any such 3rd party, after market transfers "illegal,", by forbidding them in an absurd license agreement.

      And there's nothing new about that. They have done it with every technological improvement in publishing media ever.

      For instance: Look aat the labels on very early 45 records. You'll see a license warning telling you you don't own this record, you're only licensing the right to play it under certain circumstances.

      It took the government and the "first sal

    • These days, it is possible to purchase a "book" that has no physical substance whatsoever. Ebooks are here to stay, and this is what I wonder.

      If a person wanted to buy all those ebooks directly from the publisher, set up a digital lockout system to prevent simultanous viewing (to better approximate the book being physically checked out) do you suppose these author's guild types would consider the creation of such a digital library above board?

      Absolutely. That's how an increasing number of library ebook deals are structured - essentially, the library pays per checkout.

    • If a person wanted to buy all those ebooks directly from the publisher, set up a digital lockout system to prevent simultanous viewing (to better approximate the book being physically checked out) do you suppose these author's guild types would consider the creation of such a digital library above board?

      Doesn't matter if they like it or not. Libraries have already done this. My local library has had exactly such a system in place for years now. The Author's Guild, Inc. stays the hell away from them. County library systems know this ground very well and very much have the will of the people on their side.

      And of course, they're poor. Unlike Google.

      That's all you need to know about this now dead suit.

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