[nfbwatlk] Fw: [Wcb-l] Fw: [leadership] Google Books Settlement DelayedIndefinitely
Mike Freeman
k7uij at panix.com
Sat Sep 26 15:04:16 UTC 2009
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sue Ammeter" <sue.ammeter at cablespeed.com>
To: <wcb-l at wcbinfo.org>
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 11:11 PM
Subject: [Wcb-l] Fw: [leadership] Google Books Settlement
DelayedIndefinitely
----- Original Message -----
From: "Eric Bridges" <ebridges at acb.org>
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 1:48 PM
Subject: [leadership] Google Books Settlement Delayed Indefinitely
This is very unfortunate news.
Eric
September 24, 2009, 6:34 pm
Google Books Settlement Delayed Indefinitely
By
Miguel Helft
As currently written, the controversial settlement between
Google
and groups representing publishers and authors is officially dead. On
Thursday, a federal judge gave the parties time to negotiate a new deal
that
would
address some of the many objections filed by various groups.
Judge Denny Chin of the United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York granted a motion to delay an Oct. 7 hearing on the
settlement,
which would pave the way for Google to create an immense digital library
and
bookstore. The motion
was filed earlier this week
by the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers, the
plaintiffs in the case, and was unopposed by Google, the defendant.
Judge Chin said that it made no sense to hold a hearing on the current
settlement since the parties have indicated that they are negotiating
significant
changes to it.
In
his order
, Judge Chin indicated that he took seriously the long list of
objections
that various parties have raised about the agreement.
"The current settlement agreement raises significant issues, as
demonstrated
not only by the number of objections, but also by the fact that the
objectors
include countries, states, nonprofit organizations, and prominent
authors
and law professors," Judge Chin wrote. "Clearly, fair concerns have been
raised."
But Judge Chin also echoed comments made by the Justice Department last
week
that the settlement, if properly revised, could offer great benefits,
most
notably, by providing broad access to millions of out-of-print books
that
are largely locked up in a small group of university libraries.
"The settlement would offer many benefits to society, as recognized by
supporters of the settlement as well as D.O.J.," he wrote, referring to
the
Department of Justice
, which
filed its own brief in the case
last week. "It would appear that if a fair and reasonable settlement
can be
struck, the public would benefit."
The first clear signs that the settlement in its current form would be
derailed came late Friday, when the Justice Department raised a number
of
legal and
antitrust objections to it. In its brief, the department also said that
the
parties
appeared willing to renegotiate many aspects of the agreement
to overcome its opposition.
The decision by the plaintiffs to ask for more time represents a stark
reversal from earlier this year. In April, a group of authors and the
heirs
of others,
including representatives of the estate of John Steinbeck, first asked
the
court to delay the fairness hearing and deadline for filing objections.
The
authors asked for a four-month delay, and the parties, eager to have the
agreement approved quickly, reluctantly recommended a two-month delay.
Judge
Chin
sided with the authors.
Observers say the delay provided the time necessary for the many critics
of
the deal, including the Justice Department, to come forward. The court
received
more than 400 filings, the majority of them raising issues about various
parts of the agreement.
Instead of the scheduled fairness hearing, Judge Chin asked the parties
to
convene in court on Oct. 7 for a status conference. The purpose of the
conference
is to "determine how to proceed with the case as expeditiously as
possible,
as this case has now been pending for more than four years," he wrote.
The Authors Guild and the Association of American sued Google in 2005
for
copyright infringement over the company's plan to scan books from major
libraries
and make them available online. The parties announced the settlement,
which
took two years to negotiate, in October.
The settlement also appears to be facing another
challenge in a French court.
=========================
Eric Bridges
Director of Advocacy and Governmental Affairs
American Council of the Blind
2200 Wilson Blvd. Suite 650
Arlington, VA 22201
Phone: (202) 467-5081
Fax: (703) 465-5085
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