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#31 | |
zeldinha zippy zeldissima
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also, many books which are still in copyright are also out of print and incredibly hard (or impossible) to find. this is one of the very dangerous side-effects of the current copyright law. with this in mind, google is actually safeguarding a significant portion of our collective culture for posterity, and making it far more accessible than publishers have / could. and since the publishers are ultimately the ones who are simultaneously profiting the most from the current copyright laws and falling down on the job about making (especially obscure and therefore less profitable) copyright works available, my view is that google is actually doing them a favor to some degree, and more importantly, doing future generations of readers a favor by giving them the chance to discover books which might otherwise have been lost forever. i do grant you that some aspects of google's actions are less justifiable, for example the original opt-out (rather than opt-in) approach for books which are still in print and still in copyright, but nonetheless *all* the parties involved (including the publishers and the authors, that is to say the plaignants in the case) recognize that the true winners in this case are the readers. i just don't think it's quite as black and white as your post makes it seem. |
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#32 |
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I do thank the Authors Guild - every year with my dues. This settlement proves their worth in my mind. Yes, I believe Google stepped over the line with in copyright and in print books. But the OOP books - those are an amazing resource that was slowly becoming inaccessible, not just to those who didn't have university library privileges, but to everyone.
As I mentioned in my previous post, I buy a lot of used OOP books. I would say a good half of those have been purged library editions, so even the libraries would not have these books available. (Those purged library editions were often the only version of a book available, as well.) So while Google did overstep (imo) with the in print books, this settlement is, through Google, providing an immeasureably valuable service by giving us back books that would have been otherwise lost. Readers are indeed the winners with this settlement. |
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#33 | |
New York Editor
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A lot of folks who might like to do that sort of conversion won't have Adobe Pro, and might consider getting it to set the cost of entry higher than they feel like paying. ______ Dennis |
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#34 | |||
Actively passive.
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Oh, our first fight! I can't wait for the make-up sex.
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We may not like certain laws, laws may be wrong, but to ignore and redefine things... I'll stop before this becomes a conversation about the Bush Administration. Quote:
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Again, not "through Google", but through a legal settlement. Google was perfectly content to ignore the law and do whatever they wanted, until this settlement. Last edited by Taylor514ce; 10-30-2008 at 01:57 PM. |
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#35 |
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By 'through Google' I meant that the scans of the books are being made available. The Authors Guild didn't scan the books, the publishers association didn't scan the books, Google did. Therefore, the books are being made available through Google. The settlement allows (and dis-allows) some of those scans being made available, but the scans themselves are available through Google.
That's what I was referring to (and which seems pretty clear in my original post). |
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#36 | ||
zeldinha zippy zeldissima
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are we fighting ? i think i'm just disagreeing with you.
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![]() i grant you, google wasn't being altruistic (although... maybe they were also thinking of that aspect. who knows ?), they're out to make money. but so are the publishers, and copyright laws are currently just as much a "land grab" as google's scans (possibly more, in fact). you don't seem to take into account that copyright laws embody pretty much exactly the same things you fault google for, the ultimate difference being that contrary to google not only are they ethically pretty indefensible, they also disserve society's interests overall whereas google ends up actually enriching society (culturally speaking). Out of Print, Out of Mind, exactly : how many books are lost forever because they fall out of print before they fall out of copyright, and everyone forgets about them ? i'm still not claiming google was not *legally* in the wrong ; it's just that copyright laws don't seem to me deserving of my righteous ire, and i think the google scanning project is a good thing overall, regardless of their motivations and the legality of it, whereas copyright laws need urgently to be drastically reformed (again, making a distinction between law and ethics). yes, as you say they tried to pull a fast one and got caught, and this settlement is an acknowledgement of it... but ironically it seems to me to be a sort of "pot calling the kettle black" situation. the only reason that's the case to begin with is that certain copyright holders (*cough*disney*cough*) pulled a far bigger fast one on *everybody* first, and they *did* get away with it. |
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#37 | |
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OH NOES!!!! GOOGLE IS OUT TO MAKE A PROFIT!!!! VILLAINY!!!! SCANDAL!!!! END OF THE WORLD!!!! |
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#38 | |
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Google's business model was to make a profit by intentionally circumventing laws. While individuals may do so and plausibly claim "civil disobedience" in some instances, public companies can not. Google did not set out to act as they are now doing, they were sued into doing so by the people from whom they were stealing. Perhaps they should change their name to "Robin Hood", the way some are reacting. |
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#39 |
Publishers are evil!
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zelda_pinwheel,
I have to say that I am extremely impressed by how well you write and argue your points. You have the ability to disagree without being either condesending or smug (something I don't do very well). I just wanted to let you know that I appreciated reading your thoughts on this subject (I also tend to agree with your position). |
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#40 |
Wizard
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#41 | |
Actively passive.
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Let's also clarify cause and affect here. I'm not highlighting Google's wrongness because I'm a rabid Google-hater. I'm a Google-hater because of their consistent wrongness. The wrongness isn't even in dispute, as evidenced by their settlement of this lawsuit. If you can be more specific in your objections, and address me directly rather than in the third person, it would make for a more productive conversation. Last edited by Taylor514ce; 10-31-2008 at 02:42 PM. |
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#42 | ||
zeldinha zippy zeldissima
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![]() of course, it's a lot easier to keep a rational and respectful tone when everyone else is respectful too. ![]() |
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#43 |
When's Doughnut Day?
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#44 |
Actively passive.
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You're right. I equate copyright infringement, on the scale practiced by Google (complete, systematic, wholescale) as tantamount to theft, in my moral rainbow. Others do not. Be that as it may, it is still odd to applaud Google for their actions, in this specific case (Book Registry, etc.), since those were not Google's actions. Those were actions Google was forced to make because of a legal settlement.
Google chose to ignore existing laws because they stood in the way of what they wanted to do. You may feel the laws were unjust to start with, and that Google's goals were beneficent and consistent with your own. Surely you see the slippery slope, though, don't you? That might be true in this one instance, but doesn't it set a rather dangerous precedent? I'm not comfortable with that. I'm glad that they were caught, sued, and forced to make amends, as rabidly ridiculous as that might seem. |
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#45 | |
zeldinha zippy zeldissima
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yes, ignoring a law because it's inconvenient to our goals can be a slippery slope and it is true that on principle, in the absolute, people should not be allowed to get away with it, and corporations even less than individuals ; so perhaps it was necessary to make google pay to set a precedent for when it's not google scanning copyright books to preserve our cultural heritage, but big oil devastating natural reserves in the name of an easy profit. i think that's the point you're trying to make, and it's a valid point. nonetheless, as an individual, i can allow myself to make exceptions in my own mind based on extenuating circumstances or specific situations (and in fact so can a judge), and in this specific instance, i remain convinced that overall google's actions are serving a greater good (and are possibly even motivated by that good, at least partially... you never know) and are far more defendable than copyright law, in its current form. so i'm happy about what they're doing, and what it will be bringing us (and by "us" i mean us, individuals and members of global society), and i'm really glad they will be able to continue to do it, and i am thrilled that the next time i want to determine the public domain status of a particular out of print translation of an obscure novel by a hungarian author, with a little luck, i'll be able to consult google's registry (and possibly even obtain the text from google books), instead of fruitlessly exchanging emails with any number of friendly but ultimately helpless hungarian homonymic translators / officials of the copyright bureau / editors, while the novel slips that much further into obscurity, all because a few obscenely rich copyright holders wanted to get that much richer and had the money and influence to insure that they would, to the detriment of all the rest of us. |
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