Publishers Settle Long-Running Lawsuit Over Google's Book-Scanning Project - Publishing - The Chronicle of Higher Education | Metaglossia: The Translation World | Scoop.it

Publishers Settle Long-Running Lawsuit Over Google's Book-Scanning Project
By Jennifer Howard
After a seven-year legal battle, American publishers and Google have come to terms over the company's ambitious book-digitizing project. A settlement of the publishers' copyright-infringement lawsuit, announced on Thursday by the Association of American Publishers and Google, "will provide access to publishers' in-copyright books and journals digitized by Google for its Google Library Project," according to the groups' statement, and "acknowledges the rights and interests of copyright-holders."

Litigation over the book project continues, however, between a group of authors and Google.

Under the settlement, American publishers can now opt to remove their copyrighted books and journals from Google's library project or choose to make them available for use and sale. Beyond that, the statement offered few details, not revealing what commercial terms Google and the publishers have reached.

"It's now clear that we can choose to make our works available or remove them from the project," Tom Allen, president of the publishers' association, said in an interview. "We think this clarifies a lot." Under the deal, publishers that do not remove their copyrighted material from the project can get a digital copy to use.