Kuwait Times

US court rules in favor of Google’s online library

-

NEW YORK: Google is not violating copyright laws by digitizing millions of books so it can provide small portions of them to the public, a federal appeals court ruled Friday in a decadelong dispute by authors worried that the project would spoil the market for their work.

The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan agreed with a judge who concluded that the snippets Google showed customers from its database was a transforma­tive use of the informatio­n and thus did not violate copyright laws.

Judge Denny Chin ruled in November 2013 that Google’s digitizati­on of over 20 million books, mostly out-of-print titles, did not violate copyrights because the Mountain View, California-based company only showed short sections of the books in its database. Chin had said it would be difficult for anyone to read any of the works in their entirety by repeatedly entering different search requests.

In an opinion written by Judge Pierre N. Leval, the appeals court agreed, saying the snippet feature “substantia­lly protects against its serving as an effectivel­y competing substitute for plaintiffs’ books.”

It added: “Snippet view, at best and after a large commitment of manpower, produces discontinu­ous, tiny fragments, amounting in the aggregate to no more than 16% of a book. This does not threaten the rights holders with any significan­t harm to the value of their copyrights or diminish their harvest of copyright revenue.”

The three-judge appeals panel did acknowledg­e, though, that some book sales would likely be lost if someone were merely searching for a portion of text to ascertain a fact.

The Authors Guild and various authors had challenged Google in 2005, contending that the digital book project violated their rights. Writers included Jim Bouton, author of the best-seller “Ball Four,” Betty Miles, author of “The Trouble with Thirteen,” and Joseph Goulden, author of “The Superlawye­rs: The Small and Powerful World of Great Washington Law Firms.”

Google Inc. has made digital copies of tens of millions of books from major research libraries and establishe­d a publicly available search function. It planned ultimately to scan over 100 million books, including material from the New York Public Library, Library of Congress and several major universiti­es.

The appeals court said Google’s profit motivation does not justify denial of something that overall enhances public knowledge.

“Many of the most universall­y accepted forms of fair use, such as news reporting and commentary, quotation in historical or analytic books, reviews of books, and performanc­es, as well as parody, are all normally done commercial­ly for profit,” the court noted.

The appeals panel said it recognized that libraries that had negotiated with Google to receive digital copies from the company might use them in an infringing manner. It said that could expose the libraries and Google to liability but called it “sheer speculatio­n” to raise the issue now. Lawyers did not immediatel­y return messages seeking comment.

 ??  ?? MICHIGAN: In this March 21, 2008 file photo, a scanner passes over a book at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, where one of hundreds of librarians from all over the world was helping Google Inc.’s Book Search create digital versions of all the...
MICHIGAN: In this March 21, 2008 file photo, a scanner passes over a book at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, where one of hundreds of librarians from all over the world was helping Google Inc.’s Book Search create digital versions of all the...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait