[bookshare-discuss] Fwd: info on google books, from jay m silverman

  • From: Rogerbailey81@xxxxxxx
  • To: bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 7 Sep 2009 20:53:04 EDT

Advocates: Google Books can bridge digital divide

Much of the discussion around Google's proposed book settlement has 
centered on copyright law and competition. Advocates for access got their say 
Thursday.

A coalition of civil-rights and disability groups in favor of Google's 
book-scanning project held a press conference Thursday to marshal support for 
improving
access to knowledge, the key benefit of 
Google's deal with authors and publishers to create a new kind of digital 
library
. They fear that a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to gain digital access to 
knowledge previously stored in libraries at expensive universities or rich 
communities
could be hampered by the 
opposition to the settlement from some authors and privacy advocates.

Companies and organizations are rapidly lining up
 on either side of the proposed settlement, reached last October, after 
Google was sued in 2005 for scanning out-of-print works without explicit 
permission
from rights holders. The deadline to submit comments has been extended to 
next Tuesday as the result of the last-minute realization that the U.S. 
District
Court for the Southern District of New York had planned to take its servers 
down for maintenance over the holiday weekend, though the 
deadline for authors to opt out
 of the settlement remains Friday.

Those opposing the settlement have perhaps protested most loudly over the 
past six months, but Google put together a group of organizations who stand 
to
make huge gains, if the settlement is approved--and not the monetary 
kind--to make their case on Thursday.

Blind people, for example, have access to 
a special library run by the Library of Congress
 that converts print books into formats readable by the visually impaired, 
but that library--in existence since 1931--only has 70,000 texts, said Chris
Danielsen, director of public relations for the National Federation of the 
Blind. If the settlement is approved in October, it will give 
"print-disabled"
people "access to more books than we have ever had in human history," he 
said.

Advocates for the blind 
found themselves on the opposite side
 of the Author's Guild, one of the parties to the Google settlement, 
earlier this year, after the guild protested that the text-to-speech reader on 
Amazon's
Kindle could hurt the market for audiobooks, prompting Amazon to give cont
rol of the feature to authors.

Settlement supporters like Lateef Mtima, a professor at Howard University, 
compared the possibility of opening up access to the books to his 
experiences
growing up in Harlem in the 1960s, then transferring to 
Stuyvesant High School
, a specialized school for gifted science and math students. His fellow 
students at Stuyvesant had already been exposed to a great deal of the 
literature
covered in English classes at the school, making Mtima realize that he had 
to catch up to be competitive.

Providing digital access to literature and textbooks would allow libraries 
at all schools to simply maintain PCs, rather than having to devote 
resources
toward acquiring and maintaining books, several supporters argued. Many 
communities in poorer parts of the country don't have the resources to maintain
libraries competitive with those in richer communities, and lack of access 
to knowledge makes it harder for students in those communities to learn, 
according
to Wade Henderson of the 
Leadership Council on Civil Rights.

Whether or not Judge Denny Chin is swayed by these arguments remains to be 
seen, since opponents who believe Google overstepped its bounds by scanning 
copyright-protected
books will likely make the case that two wrongs don't make a right. Still, 
they underscore exactly what is at stake with Google's library project: a 
chance
to transform the way the world accesses knowledge with an extremely 
difficult undertaking that few companies or organizations outside of 
governments 
are
thought capable of matching at the present time.

The VR Stream list is configured so that when using Control-R in most 
e-mail programs, message replies will go directly to the sender of the message. 
To
reply to the entire list, use the "reply all" function of your e-mail 
program; usually Control-Shift-R._______________________________________________
Vrstream mailing list
Vrstream@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://vrstreamusers.org/mailman/listinfo/vrstream_vrstreamusers.org


                                                                          
"The end may justify the means as long as there is something that justifies 
the end. 
" Leon Trotsky     

                 The Militant: http://www.themilitant.com Pathfinder Press: 
http://www.pathfinderpress.com
Granma International: http://granma.cu/ingles/index.html
                 _

Other related posts: