Category Archives: Google Books

Google Book Settlement Delayed; DOJ Opens Anti-Trust Inquiry

In seemingly separate developments, the proposed Google Book Search settlement had two setbacks yesterday.

  • Judge Denny Chin of Federal District Court in New York delayed the opt-out and opposition-brief filing deadline four months from May 5 until September 5, 2009 on the logic that authors and opposition groups needed more time to understand the proposed (~350 page, complex) settlement. This, in turn, delays the Final Fairness Hearing from June 11 to October 7, 2009. Simply put: now the proposed settlement cannot be approved before October.

Two more great topics to chat about with Dan Clancy, engineering director for Google Book Search, when he appears at the Mark Logic User Conference coming up on May 12-14, 2009.

WSJ: Google Books Settlement a "Ripoff"

See this editorial published in the Wall Street Journal, Google’s Book Settlement is a Ripoff for Authors by Lynn Chu of Writers Representatives, an literary agent who, according to their site, “represents authors of trade books in the sale or licensing of rights to appropriate publishers (and other copyright licensees) on the best possible terms and in all media.”

She starts with an easy lash-out against the (presumably blood-sucking) class action lawyers who stand to make $30M on the deal:

The settlement gives the class-action attorneys $30 million; a new, quasi-judicial bureaucracy called the Book Rights Registry $35 million (more on this later); and $45 million for owners infringed up to now — about $60 a title. It remains subject to a final fairness hearing, slated for June 11.

She then argues that Google has handed the publishing industry a massive data entry task:

Consider this: Under the settlement, every rights-owner in America is supposed to hand over all their private contract data, on every edition of every work they ever wrote — and every excerpt permission ever granted to others — at the peril of losing the money Google will be making on their backs. This is a massive burden on everyone in the book industry, making us all, in effect, Google’s data-entry slaves.

She then discusses publishing economics:

Book publishers today are entitled to a share of the publishing partnership because they shoulder — not lay off on authors — all the costs of editing and publication and marketing. The author’s net profit share, generally half, in books, is for his creation. The author’s share rises against the publisher when the publisher’s costs are lower, as in digital. If the author shoulders still more of those costs and burdens, the publisher’s share should be reduced again. That doesn’t happen with Google.

And concludes:

The U.S. Constitution grants authors small monopolies in their own copyrights. Author market power is talent-based and individual, not collective. This class action seeks to wipe all this out — just for Google. But U.S. law does not grant any single publisher monopoly power to herd all of us into its list.

See Slashdot for interesting discussion / reaction to the article. See this scathing rebuttal by another literary agent, Janet Reid.

Top Resources for Understanding The Google Book Settlement

We’ve had major interest in our upcoming webinar on the Google Book Settlement and unprecedented downloads of the related white paper, Google’s Settlement with the Publishing Industry: Opportunites and Strategies for Publishers, written by Bill Rosenblatt of Giant Steps Media and available for download without giving contact details here.

Given all the interest, I thought I’d share a list of what I consider the top resources for helping publishers and other information industry stakeholders understand the Google Book Settlement, its implications, and the opportunities and threats associated with it.

  • The Google Book Settlement microsite, which includes the full settlement in HTML or PDF format. Note that the full settlement consists of 16 documents with about 320 pages of text, hence explaining the need for summarization and analysis.

I should also note that Columbia Law School is holding a high-firepower, one-day conference on March 13, 2009 entitled The Google Books Settlement: What Will It Mean for the Long Term?

Finally, for those more inclined to click through a presentation than surf through the above links, below please find this excellent 69-slide summary by librarian Lauren Pressley.



If you know of other excellent resources (not just yet-another-summary articles) please share them with me by mail or blog comment, and I will attempt to update this post to add them.

(Thanks to Jill O’Neill at NFAIS for pointing to me to some of the links I added in the second revision of this post.)