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RE: Libraries criticized for role in Google Book Search
This is perhaps expressed more harshly than I would have
expressed it, but I definitely think Google is a "frenemy."
This is a word used by Martin Sorrell, CEO of the WPP Group, one
of the world's largest communications services groups, according
to an article by Ken Auletta ("The Search Party", New Yorker 83,
no. 43, Jan. 14, 2008, p. 32.). In that article, Sorrell "claimed
that his company is Google's largest advertising-agency
customer," so I feel confident in his knowledge of Google, at
least from that perspective.
Essentially, therefore, I agree with Siva.
aline soules
cal state east bay
aline.soules@csueastbay.edu
________________________________
From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu on behalf of B.G. Sloan
Sent: Wed 1/14/2009 1:17 PM
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Subject: Libraries criticized for role in Google Book Search
Last week I ran across some intriguing comments by Siva
Vaidhyanathan. In his initial analysis of the Google settlement
with publishers and authors, Vaidhyanathan briefly discusses the
role of the library partners in Google Book Search. The following
excerpt offers an interesting perspective from a non-librarian:
"My major criticisms of Google Book Seach (sic) have always
concerned the actions of the university libraries that have
participated in this program rather than Google
itself...Libraries at public universities all over this
country...have spent many billions of dollars collecting these
books. Now they are just giving away access to one company that
is cornering the market on on-line access. They did this without
concern for user confidentiality, preservation, image quality,
search prowess, metadata standards, or long-term sustainability.
They chose the expedient way rather than the best way to build
and extend their collections...I am sympathetic to the claim that
something is better than nothing and sooner is better than later.
But sympathy remains mere sympathy...we must reflect on how
complicit some universities have been in centralizing and
commercializing knowledge under a single corporate umbrella."
Just wondering what librarians might think about Vaidhyanathan's
concerns?
The full discussion (with reader comments) is at:
http://tinyurl.com/678e5l
Bernie Sloan
Sora Associates
Bloomington, IN