New Google Service

Thought I’d pass this on. Looks very interesting.

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. – Google Inc.’s Internet-leading search engine on Thursday will begin serving up the entire contents of books and government documents that aren’t entangled in a copyright battle over how much material can be scanned and indexed from five major libraries.

The list of Google’s so-called “public domain” works — volumes no longer protected by copyright — include Henry James novels, Civil War histories, Congressional acts and biographies of wealthy New Yorkers.

Google said the material, available at http://www.print.google.com, represents the first large batch of public domain books and documents to be indexed in its search engine since the Mountain View-based company announced an ambitious library-scanning project late last year.
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The program is designed to make more library material available through a few clicks of a computer mouse and attract more people to click on the highly profitable ads that Google displays on its Web site.

During the next several years, Google wants to create digital versions of millions of books stacked in the New York Public Library and four university libraries — Stanford, Harvard, Michigan and Oxford.

Google declined to disclose how many books have been scanned from the libraries so far. The project is expected to require years to complete.

But a bitter copyright dispute is threatening to crimp Google’s plans. The Authors Guild and five major publishers are suing to prevent Google from scanning copyrighted material in the libraries without explicit permission. Because it plans to show only snippets from copyrighted books, Google argues its scanning project constitutes “fair use” of the material.

Google postponed the scanning of copyrighted books in August to give writers and publishers more time to opt out of the program. The scanning of copyrighted material resumed this week, with an emphasis on books no longer in print.

3 Responses to “New Google Service”

  1. Don’t get me wrong, because having a complete on line library at your fingertips would be great….. But, we are talking about businesses and humans, where are the hooks and the funds to do such an enormous undertaking?….. In other words, who’s going to pay?…… I’m sure it won’t be a free service and one of the major hooks would be the copyright problems……

  2. I believe the only free content will be items which are now in public domain. The ones that aren’t will just offer the table of contents, user reviews, etc. Still a good way to find a book on a particular subject. You are correct, nothing is completely free. Still sounds like an interesting tool.

  3. Amazon‘s current approach to the copyright problem is to sell a book one page at a time. I wonder how they’ll determine the price per page. Divide the book price by the number of pages? Gives new meaning to “page turner”.

    This is just another driver for figuring out how to pay for information. Yes, pay for information, not books. We know how to pay for books, CDs, DVDs, etc. But that is past thinking. I, for one, would be happy to pay people for useful information. Imagine a mechanism in place where when you find something useful on the internet, you can easily pay the provider a few cents. Let’s say you enjoy reading and participating here at MRambler Central. (I’m guessing you do; who wouldn’t.) You probably would be willing to pay a few cents every, say, 20 posts that you read. Those cents could go towards keeping the site running: hosting, maintenance, upgrades–new features like Spell Check, and some may even make it to the makers of WordPress.

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