Publishers can now decide whether Google can digitize out-of-print books still protected by copyright, but does not settle the issue of individual author rights.
EnlargeAfter seven years of litigation, Google and the American Association of Publishers announced Thursday that they reached a settlement in the Google Books scanning case. But the settlement leaves a key issue on the table and does little to resolve a higher-stakes suit against Google filed by individual authors.
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The settlement with publishers allows publishers to decide whether Google can digitize their books or not. Publishers can ?choose to make available or choose to remove their books and journals digitized by Google for its Library Project,? the AAP said in a statement.
Though this changes little in the way Google and publishers already partner ? Google had already scanned some 20 million books for its Google Library Project ? it does illustrate how far publishing has come in the digital age.
?Basically when the case was filed seven years ago, that was a long time ago, and the world has changed a lot,? AAP President Tom Allen told Publishers Weekly.
?Digital books were a new and daunting prospect when the publishers first sued Google seven years ago, but they have now become commonplace,? the New York Times reported in its announcement of the settlement.
?They had this lawsuit hanging around for years, and basically the publishers have all moved on,? James Grimmelmann, a professor at New York Law School who has been following the case, told the New York Times. ?They are selling digitally now. That?s the future. This just memorializes the transition.??
The case against Google was originally filed in 2005 after Google had made public its plans to create the world?s largest digital library and partnered with several major research libraries to digitize books and journals in their collections. Authors and publishers argued this constituted copyright infringement and filed suit against Google, seeking financial damages and a court order to block the copying. A deal was reached in 2008 but was rejected by federal Judge Denny Chin, who said it raised copyright and antitrust concerns.
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