[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Google Settlement: Harvard not participating
I don't understand the big deal about Harvard's position. It's
getting a lot of press, but as I understand it, they are simply
saying that they are going to continue to do what they have been
doing all along: "University officials said that Harvard=A0would
continue its policy of only allowing Google to scan books whose
copyrights have expired."
I'm probably missing something here, but since when did
maintaining the status quo become newsworthy?
Bernie Sloan
Sora Associates
Bloomington, IN
--- On Tue, 11/4/08, Lesley Harris <lesleyeharris@comcast.net> wrote:
From: Lesley Harris <lesleyeharris@comcast.net>
Subject: Google Settlement: Harvard not participating
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Date: Tuesday, November 4, 2008, 5:51 PM
Harvard will not be part of the Google Settlement reached last
week:
from the Harvard Crimson -
"Harvard University Library will not take part in Google's book
scanning project for in-copyright works after finding the terms
of its landmark $125 million settlement regarding copyrighted
materials unsatisfactory, University officials said yesterday.
"Harvard had been one of five academic libraries, along with
Stanford, Oxford, Michigan, and the New York Public Library,
partner with Google when the book scanning initiative was
announced in October 2004. University officials said that Harvard
would continue its policy of only allowing Google to scan books
whose copyrights have expired. ...
"In a letter released to library staff, University Library
Director Robert C. Darnton, said that uncertainties in the
settlement made it impossible for HUL to participate.
"As we understand it, the settlement contains too many potential
limitations on access to and use of the books by members of the
higher education community and by patrons of public libraries,"
Darnton wrote.
"The settlement provides no assurance that the prices charged for
access will be reasonable," Darnton added, "especially since the
subscription services will have no real competitors [and] the
scope of access to the digitized books is in various ways both
limited and uncertain."
He also said that the quality of the books may be a cause for
concern, as "in many cases will be missing photographs,
illustrations and other pictorial works, which will reduce their
utility for research and education."
Lesley Ellen Harris
lesley @ copyrightlaws.com
www.copyrightanswers.blogspot.com