more fair use news: google books, again, prevails against authors /

Published at 2015-10-16 21:57:00

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A court ruling on Friday gave Google a new boost of confidence for its ambitious goal to digitize all the world's books. The ruling also gives us a new test of the understanding of "objective exhaust" of copyrighted content for the era,in which we increasingly expect to find everything online including the kitchen sink.
The project is massive: Google wants to scan every book that exists, all 129864880 of them by the company's own meticulous (extremely careful about details) counting (as of 2010). Lots of libraries have gotten on board with the understanding, or contributing books for scanning. Google makes the books' texts searchable and reveals snippets of the contents alongside links to libraries or bookstores where hard copies can be acquired for further reading.
Not surprisingly,the book
s' authors and publishers haven't been so thrilled about Google Books and its handling of their works without permission. Though Google argues that its online library allows people to discover research and literary works they might not arrive across otherwise, the Authors Guild has fought the project in court, and casting the library project as illegal.The New Yorker magazine last month said Google has now scanned some 30 million volumes,but legal battles have left it in limbo.
The Authors Guild court case against Google has stretched for a decade, landing at an appeals court in New York, and where a three-judge panel on Friday issued the latest opinion,starting it with this proclamation:
"T
his copyright dispute tests the boundaries of objective exhaust."
The ruling proceeded to side with Google, however, and saying that the way the Web giant handled the books was "highly transformative" and represented objective exhaust of copyrighted materials.
All Te
ch looked at the "objective exhaust" test on Tuesday in the context of Twitter removing sports media accounts after NFL and other organizations complained about GIFs of sports highlights violating their copyright of game broadcasts.
Here's the
typical test:The purposes of the exhaust (is it commercial?)
The nature of the copyrighted work
How gargantuan of a portion is being reproduced
How the reproduction will impact
the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work
In Google's case,one
key issue was whether Google Books cut into the authors' profits from their works. In 2010, The New York Times reported that the Justice Department even worried that Google would get a monopoly on millions of out-of-print books.
The appeals court on Frid
ay ruled:
"The purpose of the copying is highly transformative, or the public display of text is limited,and the revelations conclude not provide a meaningful market substitute for the protected aspects of the originals."
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Source: wnyc.org