A
few days ago the US Supreme Court refused [here] to grant certiorari in the
long-running battle between the Authors Guild and Google over the latter's
Books Library Project [Katposts here].
Katfriend Shalini Bengani (Competition Commission of India)
explains what happened.
Here's
what Shalini writes:
"Authors
Guild has been on a collision course with Google Book for over a decade since
they first filed their copyright infringement suit on 20 September 2005,
seeking declaratory and injunctive relief and statutory damages on behalf of a
purported class.
In a thorough opinion by Judge Leval, the 2nd Circuit explored the facts of Google Books’ digital copying, its search function and
limited snippet display of petitioners’ works. The arguments in favour of
Google Books project were overwhelming. Therefore, the 2nd Circuit concluded
that Google Books is entirely
consistent with the purposes of copyright law and fair use in fact, advances
the interests of authors. In effect, this means that as users we can continue
to benefit by scrounging for books of interest online, and this appears in line
with the needs of digital age.
So what is Google Books? Not that you don’t know but just in
case......
In response to a search query, Google Books provides the user with
a list of books that contain the chosen search term and (in many cases)
information about the immediate context in which the term appears. It also
informs the user where they can buy or borrow the book.
In 2004 Google entered into bilateral agreements with 11 major
research libraries to make digital copies of books in their collections. Those
collections included novels, children’s books, and books of poetry, but the
“vast majority” of selections were “nonfiction, and most are out of print.”
Many of the books are in the public domain, but Google also made digital copies
of books that remain in copyright.
For each book, Google made a digital scan and extracted
machine-readable text by using optical character recognition technology. By
doing so, Google was able to create a comprehensive index of the books’ texts
that can be searched by users. All of the files involved in the process are
securely stored on servers that are not accessible from the Internet and
are protected by the same security systems that protect Google’s own
confidential information.
After entering a query, a user can click on a particular search
result to see an “About the Book” page for the chosen book. “About the Book”
pages include links that allow the user to buy the book and to find the book in
a nearby library when that is possible. Those pages do not contain advertising
(other than bookseller information), and Google receives no payment in
connection with the “buy the book” links.
For certain titles, Google Books displays up to three short
snippets of text—each approximately one eighth of a book page— in response to
user queries. Those tiny segments give users some minimal contextual
information to help the searcher learn whether the book’s use of that term will
be of interest to her. By reviewing snippets containing the searched term, a
user can often determine the relevance of a book to his/ her interest in a way
not possible with earlier methods such as a card catalog or bibliographic index.
Google Books places several restrictions on snippet view that
ensure that the snippets cannot be used as a substitute for buying or borrowing
the book itself. No more than three snippets are displayed in response to a
search query, even if the same search term appears elsewhere, and Google Books
always displays the same snippets in response to a given search term, no matter
how many times the search is run. Google also “blacklists” (ie, makes
unavailable for snippet view) at least one snippet per page and one page out of
ten per book. And there are additional technological restrictions to prevent
automated downloading of snippets. These features substantially protects
against its serving as an effectively competing substitute for Plaintiffs’
books.
Google Books does not offer snippet view for certain types of
books, such as dictionaries, cookbooks, and short poems, where there is a risk
that access to a small portion of the book could be a substitute for the book
itself. Authors/right holders wary of Google Books have a choice to opt out.
The agreements between Google and each library permit the library
to download and retain a digital copy of each book it has submitted for
scanning.
|
Judge Pierre Leval |
The decision
The Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit analysed Google
Books project under the fair use factors articulated in 17 U.S.Code § 107, both
separately and in combination, noting that the statute’s four factors are not
to be treated in isolation but are to be weighed together, in light of the
purposes of copyright. Further
it noted that the first and fourth factors warrant greater weight.
First factor: Purpose and Character. The court analyzed whether Google Books
supersedes the objects’ of the original creation, or instead adds something
new, with a further purpose—that is, whether and to what extent the new work is
‘transformative. The court explained that a transformative use is one that
communicates something new and different from the original or expands its
utility and accordingly, concluded that Google Books’ search and snippet
functions are highly transformative.
Second factor: Nature of the copyrighted work. On its own, this factor did not
influence the court's analysis; the court might have weighed that factor in
favor of Google, since
most of the works in Google Books are factual, not fiction, but it did not do
so.
Third factor: Amount and substantiality of the portion used in
relation to the copyrighted work as a whole. The court explained that digital copying
of the totality of the original is literally necessary to achieve Google’s
transformative purpose of enabling search. If Google were to copy less than the
totality of the originals, then its search function could not be able to advise
searchers reliably whether their searched term appears in a book. In fact it
was noted by the 2nd Circuit that in spite of the plaintiffs’ counsel employing
researchers over a period of weeks to do multiple word searches on plaintiffs’
books, in no case were they able to access as much as 16% of the text. Further,
it was observed, that Google has constructed the snippet feature in a manner
that substantially protects against its serving as an effectively competing
substitute for plaintiffs’ books. Moreover, the snippets collected were usually
not sequential but scattered randomly throughout the book.
|
Market assessment |
Fourth factor: Effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the
copyrighted work. The ourt found no
evidence of any significant harm to the market for petitioners’ books, since
they were unable to show that any amount of searching could yield more than a
small fraction of a book’s text. The court explained that the petitioners’
copyright interest in their books does not include an exclusive right to supply
information (of the sort provided by Google) about their works. The ourt
held that although snippet view may from time to time satisfy “the searcher’s
need for access to a text,” an occasional lost sale does not constitute “a
meaningful or significant effect ‘upon the potential market of the copyrighted
work.’ The court noted that in nearly a decade of litigation the Petitioners
had failed to introduce evidence of a single lost sale attributable to Google
Books.
Finally, the ourt rejected petitioners’ claims that permitting
the libraries to download digital scans of their own books constituted
infringement: “Google’s provision of digital copies to participating libraries,
authorizing them to make non-infringing uses, is non infringing, and the mere
speculative possibility that the libraries might allow use of their copies in
an infringing manner does not make Google a contributory infringer. Hence, the
Court of Appeals properly rejected petitioners’ assertion that they suffered
economic harm because Google Books somehow preempted their right to license
their books for search uses. The court clarified that the exclusive right that
the petitioners sought to preserve is not one that copyright protects: The
copyright that protects Plaintiffs’ works does not include an exclusive
derivative right to supply information about their works through query of a
digitized copy."
Review under Campbell
v Acuff-Rose framework
The court reviewed the purpose and character of Google Books’ uses
under Campbell’s
framework. It drew a distinction between providing information about a book and appropriating the
content of that book. The Court was of the view that Google Books is a
well-intentioned project as is highly beneficial to all since it augments
public knowledge without providing the public with a substantial substitute for
matter protected by the plaintiffs’ copyright interests in the original works
or derivatives of them. Further, snippet view enables identifying of books of
interest to the searcher by way of revealing just enough context surrounding
the searched term to help a user evaluate whether the book falls within the
scope of his/her interest.
Drawing a parallel with the Campbell case, the court held that a
poetic parody may be “new creative expression,” but so is a search tool that
tells would-be readers what books are relevant to their interests in light of
their own search terms. Petitioners’ contention that no use can be
transformative unless it alters the content of the original work did not find
any support in the court and it was held that this rigid approach to fair use
ignores Campbell’s warning
against “simplification with bright-line rules.”
|
Google Books is nice and everything, but what better place to sleep while in the library than an actual book? |
Commercial character is “not conclusive” in a fair use
determination
The court was also of the view that the 2nd Circuit rightly
concluded that the fact that Google is a commercial business does not outweigh
the dramatically transformative character of Google Books. It was rightly
explained in the Campbell case that the more transformative
the new work, the less will be the significance of other factors, like
commercialism, that may weigh against a finding of fair use.
My take
While I was a law student in India, I was required to search for
books in a physical library and the resources therein were few and far between.
Searching manually took a lot of time but with Google Books, every student,
researcher, lawyer, academician stands to benefit as it brings them to the book
at the click of a mouse and also the authors close to their target audience.
Therefore, I for one, cannot extol enough the virtues of the Google Books
project.
The goal of Google Books is to make the life of every researcher or avid book reader much easy.
The Google Books litigation outcome augers well for the reading/researching
population. This case has certainly brought delight to researchers all
over the world but dismay to the Authors Guild."
Is the opinion discussed that of the Supreme Court or rather, as it appears to be, that of the 2nd Circuit? If the Supreme Court issued an opinion as well as an order, I for one would be interested to see it.
ReplyDeleteNice take Eleonora.
ReplyDeleteA