Google books agreement torpedoed by US court
The court ruled that Google's deal with authors and publishers would
give it an unfair advantage. An agreement between Google and publishers
over the web firm's publication of books online has been blocked by a US
court.
The web giant has scanned millions of books and made them available
online via its eBooks platform. Google had negotiated the deal to settle
a six-year-old class action suit claiming infringement of copyright. But
the New York court said the deal would "simply go too far", giving
Google an unfair competitive advantage.
Copyright concerns
Under the agreement with the Authors Guild and the Association of
American Publishers, Google would continue to digitise books and sell
access online. In return, the company would pay $125m (œ76.9m) in
royalties every year to the copyright owners of the books being scanned.
However, copyright concerns persisted, as the ownership of many of
the works being scanned by Google could not be established, meaning many
would be unable to claim the royalty payment.
"The [amended settlement agreement] would give Google a significant
advantage over competitors, rewarding it for engaging in wholesale
copying of copyrighted works without permission, while releasing claims
well beyond those presented in the case," said judge Denny Chin.
The US Department of Justice has approved the ruling and said it was
the "right result." It has been critical of Google's deal, saying it
would give Google exclusive rights to profit from "orphan works", where
the rights holders are unknown or cannot be found. Gina Talamon, a
Justice Department spokeswoman, said the agreement "created concerns
regarding antitrust, class certification and copyright issues." The
agreement is also separately being investigated by the US Department of
Justice on competition and copyright grounds.
Google's plan
Google responded to the ruling saying it was 'disappointing'."
We'll review the Court's decision and consider our options," said
Google's managing counsel, Hilary Ware."
Like many others, we believe this agreement has the potential to open
up access to millions of books that are currently hard to find in the US
today," she added.
"Regardless of the outcome, we'll continue to work to make more of
the world's books discoverable online through Google Books and Google
eBooks." Google has already scanned some 15 million books.
Courtesy BBC
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