As reported by the IPKat (here), a month ago the Association of
American Publishers (AAP) and Google announced the
conclusion of a settlement agreement, intended to provide access to
publishers' in-copyright books and journals digitised by Google for its Library Project.
This agreement put
an end to copyright infringement proceedings first brought against Google in
2005 by five AAP member publishers (McGraw-Hill, Pearson Education, Penguin
Group USA, John Wiley & Sons, and Simon & Schuster). Since the
agreement was concluded between the parties to the litigation, its terms did
not require judicial approval (unlike what happened last year, when the class
action settlement which Google had reached with the AAP and the Authors Guild in 2008 was rejected by Judge Denny
Chin).
In any case, the
settlement achieved with AAP did not affect the ongoing litigation between the
Authors Guild and Google. As it was then commented by James Grimmelmann on Ars Technica,
"This does exacerbate the publisher-author
tension ... It used to be the publishers and authors are in this together against
Google .... [Now] Google is going to increasingly use the consent of the
publishers as an argument that the authors don't even speak for copyright
owners."
Apparently what has been
exacerbated is not just this, as there seems to be a divergence also between the
interests of individual authors and their representative associations. At
least, this is what Google is arguing in a brief submitted last
Friday to the US Second Circuit Court of Appeals, in the context of litigation
with the Authors Guild.
As explained on paidContent, what Google is asking is to throw out Judge Denny
Chin's ruling in May last that let the Authors Guild sue Google on behalf of all
authors whose books were scanned without permission. At the time Judge Chin
had certified a class consisting of:
"All persons residing in the United States
who hold a United States copyright interest in one or more Books reproduced by
Google as part of its Library Project, who are either (a) natural persons who
are authors of such Books or (b) natural persons, family trusts or sole
proprietorships who are heirs, successors in interest or assigns of such
authors ..."
While certifying the
class is a green light for a class action to go to trial, things are in standby
at the moment, as last August the US Second Circuit Court of Appeals granted Google permission to appeal the certification.
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Sometimes "adding something new" may not be appreciated enthusiastically |
What Google is arguing
now is that a suit filed on behalf of all authors whose books have been
scanned should not be allowed because:
(1) the Google Library
Project is fair use: "Google's uses [of copyright-protected materials] are transformative
because they do not "supersede" the books but rather "add ...
something new," a greatly improved way of finding them ... The transformative
nature of Google Books and the fact that, as a general matter, it makes books
more accessible, more likely to be read and cited, and more likely to be sold
render the entire project fair use." [Merpel recalls that this
very argument is currently being used by Google also to fight proposed charges
on its News service, on which see here and here]
To support its argument,
Google recalls that in Google Books you cannot find any snippets of
reference works such as dictionaries or cookbooks or books of short-form
poetry, where even a small snippet could potentially substitute for the
reader's accessing the book itself.
(2) the Authors Guild
"cannot adequately represent ... the
large number of class members who would be harmed if [the Authors Guild] prevail - that is, the
many class members who benefit economically and in other ways from the Google
Books project and do not want to see it curtailed."
Apparently, the Authors
Guild itself had recognised as early as 2004 that many books could benefit from
exposure through Google Books.
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Camille agrees that it would be impractical to ask for permission first |
In addition, according to
a Google survey of 880 randomly selected published authors, 58% approve of
including their books in the snippet view, 45% believe inclusion helps sales of
their books, and 19% believe it advances their economic interests more
generally. Only 15% of those surveyed objected to Google Books' inclusion of
their works. Still according to the brief, for authors who object, Google has a
policy of removing books from snippet view on request.
In light of these data,
Google claims that what the plaintiffs (these being the Authors Guild and two
individual persons) are trying to do is "to dismantle a project that benefits many, and perhaps most, other
class members."
Furthermore Google argues
that, should the court decide that Google must contract with each copyright
holder in order to include a work in Google Books (as was basically requested
by Judge Chin when he rejected the 2011 settlement), "it would be impractical to continue with the project in the present
form."
We'll see what happens next. In the
meanwhile, there remains the Google Books/Hamlet dilemma - Who serves best the
interest of authors: Google or authors' associations?
Google here, Google there, Google, Google everywhere - do the managers of Google really take the view that they are the best judges of what is in the interest of everyone else (which, curiously, always seems to coincide with the best interests of Google)?
ReplyDeleteAfter Google, who next to pillage the copyright works of the world?
And will Goggle do what Google says? Just think of Streetview, which has the cameras mounted so high that internet user can get glimpses glimpses of private property that even the tallest people walking the streets do not get.
The Guild wants the ethical high-ground of speaking for millions of authors, but doesn't want to modify its policies by considering the needs and preferences of those of authors. It is, in the end, a special interest group like any other, advocating for the specific business interests of its members, which often clash with the business interests of non-member authors. For example, one might argue that easy book searching helps small unknowns (few of whom are Guild members) over the big-ticket authors that are in the public thanks to more traditional means.
ReplyDeleteWhether Google's larger points about its Books project is true is up for debate, but its survey results, that most authors are not pissed off about Books, rings true to me.
Regards,
The author of three copyrighted books viewable via Google Books