The Star Malaysia - Star2

The clash of interests

Ebook lending boom in the United States pits publishers against libraries.

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We have to pay for every single checkout, have major limitation­s on how many copies we can have ... and a lot of other arbitrary issues.

THEY don’t go missing or get torn and tattered, but ebooks are posing concerns for libraries in the United States as publishers insist on restrictiv­e and costly digital licensing contracts, librarians say.

“We have to pay for every single checkout, have major limitation­s on how many copies we can have ... and a lot of other arbitrary issues,” said Alison Macrina, a librarian and director of the Library Freedom Project, an advocacy group.

Digital collection­s – including ebooks, audiobooks, music and more – have become increasing­ly central to libraries’ work, particular­ly since the Covid-19 pandemic when they allowed lending to continue during lockdowns.

Patrons checked out a record 662 million ebooks and other digital products from libraries last year, 19% more than the previous year, according to Overdrive, a major platform.

Over the past decade-and-ahalf, the handful of companies that control most US ebook production and distributi­on have started to lease these works to libraries – rather than selling copies outright.

Dubbed “the Netflix model” by some librarians, licensing is not only more expensive, but some worry it allows companies to track reading habits, remove books or censor content.

“Major publishers offer no option for the vast majority of ebooks to be owned at all by a consumer, whether an individual or a library. You buy a license to view the file,” said Lia Holland from Fight For The Future, a digital rights non-profit.

The clash of interests between publishers and libraries has resulted in a series of legal battle in recent years.

Publishing companies worry that constraint­s on ebook licensing could hurt the sector’s economics, while libraries argue the higher fees and other restrictio­ns undermine their mission to make books easily available and encourage reading.

“It’s an illustrati­on of the vehemence of this push toward profit maximisati­on at the cost of an educated populace,” said Holland, campaigns and communicat­ions director at Fight for the Future, which has been meeting federal lawmakers on the issue.

A number of US states have considered laws to oblige publishers to make ebooks available to libraries on “reasonable terms”. But publishers and authors have warned the proposals would lower the value of literary works, and a US federal judge in 2022 ruled one such state law in Maryland was unconstitu­tional.

Library lawsuits

Two copyright lawsuits now threaten further restrictio­ns to how libraries can make digital works available.

In 2020, four major publishers sued the Internet Archive, a non-profit library with some 44 million print materials and also the world’s largest archive of the Internet. The publishers seek to limit what is known as controlled digital lending – the library’s ability to purchase a book, scan it and then lend the digital copy.

Music publishers also brought a second lawsuit over some of the group’s audio recordings.

“It’s about ownership – library ownership versus licensing – and the tension that exists between those two ways of managing materials,” said Chris Freeland, director of library services at the Internet Archive.

Freeland said the issue was

crucial for reader access as well as preservati­on: “We can’t preserve what we don’t own.”

Terrence Hart, the general counsel for an industry trade organisati­on, the Associatio­n of American Publishers, said last year the “Internet Archive’s industrial scale format-shifting activities constitute copyright infringeme­nt”.

“There is simply no legal support for the notion that Internet Archive or a library may convert millions of ebooks from print books for public distributi­on without the consent of, or compensati­on to, the authors and publishers,” he said.

A judge sided with the publishers last year, but the Internet Archive appealed and the case is ongoing.

Longstandi­ng fights over content ownership have expanded to control of distributi­on channels, said Dave Hansen, executive director of Authors Alliance, which represents authors and submitted a brief in the Internet Archive lawsuit.

He said there were now four major ebook publishers in the US, each with their own rules.

“These private contracts, private terms and private pieces of technology have supplanted the more generally applicable rules that we have under copyright,” he said.

Hansen pointed to a 2022 incident when publisher John Wiley and Sons suddenly removed 1,380 titles from a collection of academic ebooks that many libraries use.

The experience “demonstrat­ed the power that publishers had to unilateral­ly dictate what kind of content users could get access to,” he said.

Wiley later reversed the decision. It said in a statement it was committed to providing students with affordable e-books and expanding the range of titles available.

Ai-guided book bans

New technologi­es are also being used by school boards in their efforts to comply with recently passed state laws banning material that lawmakers have ruled to be offensive.

School book bans have increased substantia­lly in recent years and become more comprehens­ive, according to PEN America, which tracked 5,894 efforts in 41 states from 2021 to 2023.

In Iowa, Mason City Community Schools used artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to analyse book content to ensure compliance with a state law passed last year requiring the removal of works depicting sexual acts.

“With thousands of books to manage across nine building-level libraries, AI was a tool to efficientl­y narrow down the list of potential non-compliant books,” Mason City schools superinten­dent Pat Hamilton said in an email.

In December, a federal judge blocked implementa­tion of the state law, pending a legal challenge.

Yet the new use of this technology echoes past lessons around AI and social media moderation, said Emile Ayoub, counsel in the liberty and national security programme with the Brennan Center for Justice, a think-tank.

“Again and again we’ve seen the limitation­s of these tools – they’re unreliable, unable to understand content and nuance, they’re biased and can disproport­ionately impact minority communitie­s,” he said.

A tool such as CHATGPT – the “generative” AI programme released a year ago – offers a veneer of objectivit­y, even while producing inconsiste­nt results, he said.

“Broad and vague book bans like in Iowa are a basic threat to free speech,” Ayoub said.

“And when you use generative AI tools to comply with those bans, it only increases that risk.”

Researcher­s with the Harvard Library Innovation Lab last year tested several “large language models” (LLMS) that power tools such as CHATGPT – asking the models to provide justificat­ions to ban particular books.

They found that safeguards against harmful requests were “unpredicta­ble”, with models often going back and forth but complying 75% of the time.

“The key point to remember here is that variabilit­y is not a bug, but a feature of LLMS,” the lab’s Matteo Cargnelutt­i and Kristi Mukk said in email.

“For now you’ll learn a lot more by talking to a real librarian,” added the lab’s director, Jack Cushman.

Alison Macrina

 ?? — Filepic ?? dubbed ‘the Netflix model’ by some librarians, digital licensing is not only more expensive, but some worry it allows companies to track reading habits, remove books or censor content.
— Filepic dubbed ‘the Netflix model’ by some librarians, digital licensing is not only more expensive, but some worry it allows companies to track reading habits, remove books or censor content.

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