NY Times: In E-Books, It’s an Army vs. Google

From the NY Times Article:

A broad array of authors, academics, librarians and public interest groups are fighting the company’s plan to create a huge digital library and bookstore. Their complaints reached the ears of regulators at the Justice Department, which last month helped derail the plan by asking a court to reject the class-action settlement that spawned it.

[Snip]

Some analysts say the broad-based opposition to Google’s lofty plans was unprecedented and a harbinger of the intense scrutiny the company’s ambitious agenda will face.

“This was the first issue through which Google’s power became clearly articulated to the public,” said Siva Vaidhyanathan, associate professor of media studies and law at the University of Virginia. “All sorts of people — writers, researchers, librarians, academics and readers — really feel they have a stake in the world of books.”

[Snip]

“The benefits far outweigh any of these criticisms that are being made, many of which are quite theoretical,” Mr. [David] Drummond [Senior Vice President, Corporate Development and Chief Legal Officer, Google] said. “We have a good process now for taking into account some of the objections.” He added: “The fact that there are some critics doesn’t mean you should be paralyzed and not do something that provides value.”

Much More in the Full Text of the Article

Source: New York Times

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