Archive for the ‘Information Industry’ Category

CNBC to Debut “Inside the Mind of Google” Documentary on December 3rd

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

According to this CNBC announcement, a new documentary about Google will debut on Thursday, December 3rd at 9PM ET/PT.

From the Announcement:

The one-hour documentary delivers a comprehensive look at Google’s crown jewel– its Internet search engine- the most visited web site in the world. In fact, despite formidable competition, nearly two-thirds of Internet searches worldwide are done on Google. Bartiromo speaks with Google Vice President Marissa Mayer, the keeper of the simple, uncluttered and clean “look” that has made Google a stunning economic success as well as a cultural phenomenon.

And, CNBC takes viewers inside the “Googleplex,” the company headquarters famous for its amazing perks and casual, fun atmosphere and a place where some of the brightest minds in the world actually want to work. It’s the setting for a corporate culture, created by founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, that’s inspired ideas that have transformed the way we interact with information, the Internet and each other.

[Snip]

CNBC speaks with Vic Gundotra, Google’s chief mobile evangelist and gets an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at a team racing to develop a new technology for mobile phones.

“Inside the Mind of Google” will re-air on Thursday, December 3rd at 10PM ET/PT, Saturday, December 5th at 7PM ET and Sunday, December 6th at 10PM ET

You can find clips from the documentary, slide shows and other related material at: insidegoogle.cnbc.com.
Note: The site is not live as of November 22, 2009. We will keep checking.

Finally, we will try and find out when “Inside the Mind of Google” will air in other parts of the world.

Source: CNBC
Hat Tip: WebNewser

Yahoo Enhances News “Shortcut”

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

This Search Engine Land Post by Greg Sterling alerts us to an enhanced “new shortcut” now containing real-time info. Shortcuts are found at the top of Yahoo Search results pages and contain everything from investor/business information to maps. You can find a complete list of shortcuts here. Again, shortcuts appear when a searcher uses the basic web search box.

So, what’s new?

Now when certain words, places, and names in the news are searched you’ll not only find direct links to news stories from the Yahoo News database but also:

+ News Photos (from a variety of sources)
+ News Video (from a variety of sources)
+ Recent Tweets

Here are Two Examples:

+ Barack Obama
+ U.S. Senate

Sterling reports that Yahoo is running their own algorithm to assist in filtering out Twitter “noise.”

That said, Yahoo really should show more Twitter results when possible. As of today, they only show two and then provide a link to run a search on the Twitter database.

Open Book Alliance Posts Third Party Analysis of Revised Google Books Settlement

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

The Special Libraries Association of the New York Library Association are members of the Open Book Alliance.

From the Blog Post:

…the Open Book Alliance released an extensive compilation of third party analysis of the revised Google Books Settlement. The wide-ranging consensus from a diverse chorus of voices is that the revised Settlement is barely distinguishable from the original Settlement and far from satisfying the major concerns of the Department of Justice and other objectors.

The post is divided into seven sections:

+ Overall Analysis

+ Continuing Anti-trust Concerns

+ FATE OF UNCLAIMED/Orphan Works

+ Copyright Infringement CONCERNS

+ COMPLETE LACK OF Privacy:

+ ABUSE OF Class Action PROCESS:

+ CONTINUING Foreign COMPLAINTS

Source: OBA

Want Evidence of the Decline of Print Media? Go To the Library

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

From the Article:

In 2009, print magazines lost advertisers, readers, and now, it seems, the Main Branch of the San Francisco Public Library. This year, the branch will spend about $385,000 on periodicals, down nearly $75,000 from the year before. The reason is no surprise: magazine closings, and a switch to online databases.

With the decline of the magazine industry, libraries — long temples to all things printed — have become veritable old folks’ facilities for traditional print media, a final home for 20th-century relics who are slowly dying off. A decade ago, the San Francisco Public Library system had about 15,000 print subscriptions. This year, its active collection, with at least 400 titles dropped, has fallen to fewer than 11,000, the lowest in five years, according to Main Branch chief Kathy Lawhun.

[Snip]

This year, the Main Library boosted spending on its 106 databases and online resources from $750,000 to $1 million.

So what happens with the money saved on periodical subscriptions? This year’s savings go to the library’s book budget. So maybe print still wins. For now.

Access the Complete Article

Source: San Francisco Weekly

See Also: The Amazing Collection of Databases (Most Available Remotely) that SF Public Library Offers Users.

See Also: The Collection of e-Media (Most Resources Available Remotely) that SF Public Libraries Offers Users.

Eight Minute Audiobooks from iMind Will Soon Be Available to OverDrive Customers; Already For Sale via iTunes and Audible

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Eight minutes? Yes, eight minutes. All of the audiobooks are non-fiction and all contain original content.

From the Announcement

iMinds, which launched in September of this year, creates unique, short-form, eight-minute MP3 audio books on general knowledge topics, known as “MindTracks”. Each MindTrack is heavily researched and features music and sound effects to keep listeners entertained and engaged while they learn. Additionally, iMinds recently launched iMinds Juniors – five-minute MindTracks for children ages 7 – 14 years old.

Under the distribution agreement, the entire iMinds catalog of more than 180 titles–Including iMinds Junior–will soon be available to thousands of online retailers, libraries and schools. Library inventory managers and online retailers worldwide will be able to select iMinds titles to offer their users for download. As new MindTracks are developed, they’ll be distributed through the OverDrive system.

You can learn more about iMinds via this FAQ:

+ Based in Sydney, NSW, Australia

+ Content for Sale via Audible or iTunes (in U.S.) The files contain no DRM and cost .99/U.S.

+ “…iMinds is first-to-market with a new kind of edutainment product that appeals to the inquisitive minds of the time-poor, knowledge-thirsty and savvy iPod/MP3 users. The vision is to build a encyclopedia-like catalog of hundreds of these “MindTracks” encompassing an almost limitless array of topics.”

+ “iMinds content is developed with the help of a team of ten award-winning writers, educators and researchers, including professionals who are experts in economics, history, government and public policy, film and theater, music, literature, the law, and other topics. Each product goes through a multiple step fact-checking process, usually lasting two-three weeks and involving several layers of editorial research and control.”

Here’s imind’s complete catalog.

Audiobook Topics Include:

+ Champs Elysees

+ New York Yankees

+ Fireworks

+ Fall of the Berlin Wall

+ REM Sleep

You’ll find info about the new iMinds Junior audiobooks for kids on the their home page.

Source: OverDrive, iMinds

Google Book Search: Amazon.com Files Motion Asking Judge to Reconsider His Preliminary Approval of Settlement 2.0

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

James Grimmelmann writes on The Laboratorium:

It’s a full-on attack on the settlement; Amazon’s theory is that the future-claims issue is such a fundamental flaw in the settlement that there is no way Judge Chin could ultimately approve it.

[Snip]

Thus, Amazon argues, Judge Chin should save time and resources, reject this settlement, and give the parties another 30-45 days to negotiate a settlement that includes only releases relating to past claims.

Access the Complete Post

Source: The Laboratorium

See Also: Judge Gives Preliminary Approval to Google Deal, Sets Feb. 18 for Final Hearing

Google Books Settlement 2.0: Evaluating Competition

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Its been a week since Settlement 2.0 was released. We have a comprehensive press review along with many related documents from the past week here.

Until the next major event and our next press review, we will continue to post Settlement 2.0 news and analysis with a focus on stories, analysis, and opinion that has a library angle to it.

We begin with this analysis of competition by Fred von Lohmann at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. It includes an entire section dealing with institutional subscriptions titled, “Monopoly Pricing of the Institutional Subscription Database?”

One of the commercial services that Google is authorized to provide under the proposed settlement is the “Institutional Subscription Database” (aka “ISD”), which will provide “all-you-can-eat” access to the corpus of scanned books. The chief customers for the ISD are likely to be universities (the same folks who are providing Google with the books to be scanned), for whom instant digital access to every word in every book in Google’s collection is likely to be very compelling.

The big question is whether, over time, the ISD will become the one database that no university can do without, and the one database with no market substitute (again, because Google will be the only company who can provide a comprehensive corpus without fear of copyright liability, for the reasons explained above). This, of course, is a recipe for monopolistic price gouging, as a group of academic authors led by Prof. Pam Samuelson have pointed out. Over time, universities could face spiraling prices as Google and the Registry conspire to maximize their revenues on the ISD product.

Source: Electronic Frontier Foundation

Bing Posts “Behind Bing” Tour

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Take a multimedia tour of 14 features that Bing offers up. Each tour stop includes a video overview, some “behind the feature” comments (feel free to skip), and direct links to that specific feature. A useful way to get up to speed on a few features that are unique to Bing. Yes, it’s basically a commercial but with that understood it can be useful, especially for those who teach web search skills and want to show users that each engine (B,G,Y) offers not only a unique database but also a variety of features.

The 14 “Tour Stops” are:

+ Real-Time Search

+ Weather/Event Results

+ Bing Local

+ Enhanced Results

+ Videos

+ Enhanced Hover

+ Bing for Mobile

+ Bing Travel

+ Bing Health

+ Bing Shopping

+ Visual Search

+ Reference

+ Wolfram|Alpha

+ Search Sharing

By the way, are most favorite Bing feature is not listed. Check out the incredible “bird’s eye” imagery that Bing provides for many locations around the world. Here’s an example. The Coliseum in Rome. On the left side of the image look for a + (plus sign). Click it and zoom-in. Wow!

Congrats and Kudos to ALA’s Washington Office Team on the New Look of their District Dispatch Blog

Friday, November 20th, 2009

The blog has a new look that’s very easy on the eyes. You’ll also find links to the District Dispatch RSS and Twitter feeds. If the intersection of the library world with the world of U.S. politics is of interest, District Dispatch (D) is essential reading. So, a ResourceShelf tip of the cap to Jacob Roberts and the rest of the staff at ALA’s office in Washington DC.

Btw, the new look is great but we do hope the “District Dispatch” powers that be bring back the mobile-friendly version of District Dispatch that we posted about last month. We just checked with a mobile browser and we are seeing the “regular” version of DD.

Source: DD

Another New Digitization Project from NARA and Footnote: The Native American Collection

Friday, November 20th, 2009

From the Announcement:

Working together with the National Archives and Allen County Library, Footnote.com has created a unique collection that will help people discover new details about Native American history.

The Footnote Interactive Native American Collection features original historical documents including:

+ Ratified Indian Treaties – dating back to 1722

+ Indian Census Rolls – featuring personal information including age, place of residence and degree of Indian blood

+ The Guion Miller Roll – perhaps the most important source of Cherokee genealogical research

+ Dawes Packets – containing original applications for tribal enrollments

+ And other documents relating to the Five Civilized Tribes

Footnote’s Native American microsite creates an interactive environment where members can search, annotate and add comments to the original documents. Additionally, visitors can view pages for many of the Native American tribes that include historical events on a timeline and map, a photo gallery, stories and comments added by the community.

Source: Footnote

See Also: National Archives and Footnote.com Announce New Digital Holocaust Collection

See Also: Footnote.com and the National Archives Launch an Interactive Vietnam War Memorial

See Also: More Digitized U.S. Government Documents via Footnote.com Now Online

Judge Gives Preliminary Approval to Google Deal, Sets Feb. 18 for Final Hearing

Friday, November 20th, 2009

From the Article:

Judge Denny Chin has given his preliminary approval to the Google Book Search settlement agreement and established a timeline to move the agreement toward a final resolution. A final settlement/fairness hearing has been set for February 18 at which Judge Chin will hear arguments to determine whether the agreement is “fair, reasonable, adequate;” consider whether to certify the class for purposes of the settlement; and to make a determination whether to approve the agreement.

Prior to the hearing, the judge has ordered that supplemental notices about the amended agreement be sent beginning December 14, and he set a January 28 deadline for objections to be filed with the court.

[Snip]

As part of the amended settlement, companies from outside of the U.S. were to be added as plaintiffs. The order notes that new plaintiffs include Harlequin, Melbourne University Publishing Ltd., and The Text Publishing Company.

Source: Publisher’s Weekly

Two New Databases from EBSCO for Art and Architecture Researchers

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

From the Announcement:

Art & Architecture Index and Art & Architecture Complete, EBSCO provides definitive research databases for the study of art and architecture. Designed for use by a diverse audience, Art & Architecture Index and Art & Architecture Complete will appeal to art scholars, artists, designers, college students and general researchers.

These new art & architecture resources include cover-to-cover indexing and abstracts for more than 620 academic journals, magazines and trade publications as well as over 140 books. Selective coverage is also provided for more than 135 additional publications.

Art & Architecture Complete also contains full-text coverage of more than 230 art & architecture-specific periodicals and more than 100 books. These databases are available via the EBSCOhost platform.

Source: EBSCO

Find Similar Images with GazoPa (Beta)

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Here’s a beta image search engine named GazoPa.

It allows the user to upload an image, enter an image URL, draw a picture (cool!), or keyword search a database of the GazoPa database and then find SIMILAR images based on the image that was upload or keyword search. You can also combine an image (what they call a “key image”) with keyword(s). A Firefox addon, a bookmarklet, and an iPhone app are also available. GazoPa is not exactly new (their blog goes back to September, 2008) but it’s new to us. So, why not share. Their colorful logo might remind some of other search engines with colorful logos. (-:

The home page also claims the database is large, more that 60 million images. We need to confirm this but the way we read the final page of the FAQ is that the 60 million images were crawled by GazoPa. They also have a page for webmasters about their crawler, GazoPabot. In other words, they’re not buying their image collection by stringing together other image databases they’ve been given access to for free or a fee.

Results pages offer four types of results:

+ Images
+ Videos (it appears that most of the results come from YouTube)
+ News Images (it appears to be a GazoPa crawl)
+ Flickr (Is the Flickr database included in the 60 million images total?)

Worth mentioning, GozaPa is a venture project of the Hitachi Corporation (note the copyright info at the bottom of the home page).

So, go forward and demo. We’ll do the same and report back in a week or so.

See Also: GazoPa Blog

See Also: GazoPa Twitter Feed

See Also: A little over a week ago we posted about a reverse image search named Tin Eye. tool has users upload an image and then the Tin Eye technology goes out on the web to see if others are using your content.

Google Makes Stanford Dissertations Searchable

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

What does this mean for ProQuest in the long term?

From the Article:

Stanford doctoral students will now be able to post their dissertations on Google as the university replaces the traditional bound volumes of acid-free paper with e-files of scholarly work.

[Snip]

The key to the effort is the university’s partnership with Google, which will allow anyone with a computer to access the work of Stanford doctoral students.

“We have way north of 35,000 bound dissertations on our shelves,” said university Librarian Michael Keller, who has been pushing for the digital dissertations. “Many of them just stay on the shelf, forgotten and invisible, or scholars have to pay enormous sums to come to Stanford to read them.”

[Snip]

While other universities already allow electronic submissions, “we’re the only one we know of that’s going the whole route, with approval online and then sending it down the electronic pipe,” Keller said.

[Snip]

But using the company costs money, which meant that students would end up paying as much as $221 in fees when they filed their dissertations with the registrar’s office. Stanford’s electronic filing system will be free, although students still can pay to have their dissertations listed on ProQuest, an online subscription service for dissertations and other academic publications.

[Snip]

Science students are used to having their papers published quickly as journal articles,” he said. “But the ‘tenure book’ is very important in the humanities, and students were worried that making their work instantly accessible might affect publishers’ decisions later on.”

The problem was solved by allowing the graduate students to embargo their work for up to five years, to give them time to get it published. They also will be allowed to decide whether to release either 20 or 100 percent of their dissertation to Google.

Source: SF Chronicle

Hat Tip: Library Stuff

New Features and a New Look for Google Translate

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Access Google Translate

From the Blog Post:

+ Google Translate offers 51 languages, representing over 98% of Internet users today.

+ Can Translate 2550 Language Pairs

+ New Layout

+ Google Translate now translates your text right as you type. (Cool!)

Want to say “Today is a good day” in Chinese, but can’t read Han characters? Click “Show romanization” to read the text written phonetically in English. Right now, this works for all non-Roman languages except for Hebrew, Arabic and Persian.

+ New input transliteration feature for Arabic, Persian or Hindi.

+ Text -to-Speech: When translating into English, you can now also hear translations in spoken form by clicking the Speaker Icon. (Something that those in the ESL world might find useful.

+ Here’s an Overview Video

Access Google Translate

Source: Google Blog
Hat Tip: Library Stuff

Just for Fun: Take a Brief Photo Tour of Twitter’s New HQ

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Twitter co-founder Evan Williams’ (he’s also the founder of Blogger) wife, Sara Morishige Williams, helped design the space that includes a DJ booth. A dance as you tweet kind of thing. (-:

The Twitter HQ photo tour can be accessed here.

Source: Venture Beat

Two New Members Elected to OCLC Board of Trustees

Monday, November 16th, 2009

From the Announcement:

The OCLC Board of Trustees has elected two new members: Bernadette Gray-Little, Chancellor of the University of Kansas, and John R. Patrick, President of Attitude LLC and former Vice President of Internet Technology at IBM Corporation. The two new members replace board members whose terms have expired.

Dr. Gray-Little replaces Ralph Frasier, Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary (retired), The Huntington National Bank. Mr. Patrick replaces Jane Ryland, President Emerita of CAUSE, the association for managing and using information resources in higher education. The terms of Mr. Frasier and Ms. Ryland expired this year.

[Snip]

“I would like to thank Ralph Frasier and Jane Ryland for their years of dedicated service on the OCLC Board of Trustees,” said Larry Alford, Chair, OCLC Board of Trustees and Dean of University Libraries, Temple University. “Their insight, judgment and experience have helped guide and shape OCLC in the pursuit of its public purposes of furthering access to the world’s information and reducing library costs. They have been forceful advocates for OCLC’s members during the decade they served on the Board. The OCLC cooperative owes them a deep debt of gratitude.”

The OCLC Board of Trustees is made up of 15 members. Six trustees are elected by OCLC Global Council. Eight trustees are elected by the Board itself. The President of OCLC also serves on the Board. Nine of the 15 trustees currently serving on the OCLC Board of Trustees are librarians.

You can find biographies of Bernadette Gray-Little and John R. Patrick here.

Source: OCLC

Wikimedia Begins Its Annual Fundraising Drive

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

A post on the Wikimedia Foundation blog by Sue Gardner, Executive Director of Wikimedia, says that the 2009 drive began last week.

She Writes:

When Jimmy Wales founded Wikipedia in 2001, it was just an experiment. Nobody imagined Wikipedia would really succeed — least of all, probably, Jimmy. He just thought it would be interesting to try.

But now, fewer than 10 years later, the number of people who use Wikipedia has grown to 330 million. Students, teachers, tourists, entrepreneurs, parents, job-hunters, retired people, doctors, artists, engineers — everywhere around the world. We use Wikipedia because it’s free, it’s convenient, and it gives us the information we’re looking for. It’s always there when we want it.

Gardner says this year’s fundraising goal is $7.5 million.

The 2009 slogan is “Wikipedia Forever.” You’ll see it at the top of every Wikipedia entry. Clicking on it takes you to this page with a picture of Jimmy Wales, an FAQ, and a box to make your donation. The mobile version has a box bar at the top of every page asking you to text the word WIKI to a number and make a $10 donation.

Source: Wikipedia Blog

From the News Release:

Wikipedia has become more than just a website,” said Jimmy Wales, founder of the free online encyclopedia, which is now one of the five most popular websites in the

world according to comScore. “For millions of people, it’s become an indispensable part of their daily lives.”

Funds raised by the campaign will be used to defray normal operating costs such as the cost of bandwidth and servers, as well as to support projects aimed at making Wikipedia easier to use, encouraging more people to contribute, and increasing the availability of free knowledge for more people, in more languages, in more parts of the world. Wikipedia currently offers 13 million articles in over 250 languages, and is used by 330 million people around the world.

See Also: Listen Online: BBC Radio Interview: Jimmy Wales Wants to Make Wikipedia More “Worldly”

See Also: Wikipedia’s Jimmy Wales Sits Down for an Exclusive Interview with Silicon.com

See Also: Wikipedia Co-Founder Jimmy Wales Interviewed by Yale Daily News

Press Review+: Google Book Search Revised Settlement (2.0) Released; What About Libraries?

Friday, November 13th, 2009

We’re going to on the lookout for news, commentary from experts, and viewpoints from various organizations and companies involved in the GBS story. We’re posting selected snippets with links to the full text. We also know that in the document filed with the court, there is one mention of libraries, public libraries to be specific.

From Google and Others Involved:

+ Modifications to the Google Books Settlement (via Google Public Policy Blog, Dan Clancy)

The changes we’ve made in our amended agreement address many of the concerns we’ve heard (particularly in limiting its international scope), while at the same time preserving the core benefits of the original agreement: opening access to millions of books while providing rightsholders with ways to sell and control their work online.

The blog post also links to a settlement modifications overview (3 pages) and a Revised Settlement FAQ (2 pages).

Are libraries mentioned in these documents? Yes. As you’ll read not much is different in terms of access except that the amended agreement allows the Registry to increase the amount of terminals in a public library.

On Page 2 of the Overview it States:

The amended settlement does not change the primary access models outlined in the original agreement, including enabling readers to preview and purchase books, selling institutional subscriptions to the whole database, and giving libraries free access at designated terminals. Under the revised agreement, possible additional access models to which Google and the Registry might agree in the future have been reduced and are now limited to: print-on-demand*, file download, and consumer subscription. The amended agreement also enables the Registry to increase the number of terminals at a public library building

* The Amended Settlement limits POD, if approved, to Books that are not Commercially Available.

There is no mention of the words library or libraries in the FAQ.

There is a third document, a Supplemental Notice (an actual court filing; 6 pages; PDF),  listing all of the changes to the settlement.  #17 talks about the terminals in public libraries that we mentioned a moment ago.

Here are a few more changes (via the supplemental notice) that might be of special interest:

+ #16:

The Amended Settlement provides that the Registry will facilitate Rightsholders’ wishes to allow their works to be made available through alternative licenses for Consumer Purchase, including through a Creative Commons license…The Amended Settlement also clarifies that Rightsholders are free to set the Consumer Purchase price of their Books at zero.

+ #18:

The Amended Settlement no longer includes children’s book illustrations in the definition of Inserts. (ASA Section 1.75) The Amended Settlement, however, does not change the inclusion of pictorial works, such as graphic novels and children’s picture books, in the definition of Books and provides that the Amended Settlement only authorizes Google to display the pictorial images in such Books if a U.S. copyright owner of the pictorial image also is a Rightsholder of the Book. The Amended Settlement also clarifies that comic books are considered to be Periodicals and that Periodicals (as well as compilations of Periodicals) are not included in the definition of “Books,” and thus are not in the Amended Settlement.

Finally, if you would like to read the complete Amended Settlement Agreement, here’s the 173 page PDF file.

+ Amended Google/AAP Settlement (via Coyle’s InFormation, Karen Coyle)
An excellent overview of Settlement 2.0 from librarian Karen Coyle. She brings up several library related issues including the removal of an OCLC “exception”; download formats and course packs; and much more. This is must read material.

+ Is the Google Books Settlement Worth the Wait?

The Open Book Alliance–SLA and The New York Library Association–are two of its members has posted their views after a preliminary reading of the revised settlement. Here are a few snippets.

Open Book Alliance co-chair Peter Brantley said, “Our initial review of the new proposal tells us that Google and its partners are performing a sleight of hand; fundamentally, this settlement remains a set-piece designed to serve the private commercial interests of Google and its partners. None of the proposed changes appear to address the fundamental flaws illuminated by the Department of Justice and other critics that impact public interest.

[Snip]

Most critically, the settlement proposal must not grant Google an exclusive set of rights (de facto or otherwise) or result in any one entity gaining control over access to and distribution of the world’s largest digital database of books. It is clear that Google has failed to meet these requirements.

UPDATE: 11/17 The Monopoly Continues (Source: Open Book Alliance)

UPDATE: 11/17 Proposed Changes Fail to Address Fundamental Flaws, Says Open Book Alliance Co-Chair (via Open Book Alliance)

+ Revised Google Book Settlement Filed & Live Blogging The Press Call (via Search Engine Land, Danny Sullivan)

Danny took the time to live blog the conference call that took place early Saturday morning, east coast time. On the call were:

+ Richard Sarnoff, chairman of the American Association of Publishers

+ Paul Aiken, executive director of the Authors Guild

+ Daniel Clancy, engineering director for Google Books

Here’s how they responded to the Open Book Alliance comments that are posted and linked to above this item.

So the response to that? Clancy stepped up, saying there were lots of discussions on how to change things. Adjustments were made to address class member concerns (the people involved in the lawsuit, rather the the Open Book Alliance, which is not a party to the suit). “I understand Amazon, Microsoft and the Internet Archive don’t want to increase access to these books,” he said, or very close to that. That was a zinger, stressing that the Open Book Alliance just happens to be backed by major Google competitors. Not that Google minds. Clancy said they welcome the competition and feel the settlement addresses concerns.

Aiken: “These are substantial changes.” He added that yes, the core settlement was largely protected but that it had to be, as it was in general seen correct.

Sarnoff: Said he assumed the OBA hadn’t read the settlement. That was probably true enough. The press conference itself appears to have started about 1/2 hour after the settlement was out. Some reporters on the call mentioned they hadn’t even read it.

+ The Authors Guild Has a Review of the MaJor Changes on their Site

+ Google Book Search Settlement Revised: No Reader Privacy Added (From the Electronic Frontier Foundation)

Unfortunately, the parties did not add any reader privacy protections. The only nominal change was that they formally confirmed a position they had long taken privately that information will not be freely shared between Google and the Registry. Our partners at the ACLU of Northern California have a blog post describing the changes we, and the authors we represent, have demanded and continuing the call for readers everywhere to let Google CEO Eric Schmidt know that reader privacy should not be left behind as books move into the digital age.

+ Amended Google Book Settlement: Doesn’t Deal with Privacy Problems (ACLU of Northern California)

One of our core privacy concerns with the Settlement has been that reading records are not properly protected from disclosure to the government and third parties. Readers should be able to use Google Book Search without worrying that the government or a third party is reading over their shoulder. No Settlement should be approved that allows reading records to be disclosed without a properly-issued warrant from law enforcement and court orders from third parties.

The Amended Settlement does not resolve this concern, with its only new privacy provision being the following:

“The revised agreement includes language that specifies that Google will not share any private information with the Registry without valid legal process.”

Much More After a Click
(more…)

Hathi Trust Digital Library Publishes Update on October Activities (November, 2009)

Friday, November 13th, 2009

The update consists of a four page PDF.

Here’s a list of some of the topics covered. Access the full text to get all of the details.

Ingest

HathiTrust ingested a record 553,963 volumes in October. These included nearly 5,000 volumes from Penn State and initial loads of volumes from the University of California’s Santa Cruz and San Diego campuses. Ingest of volumes from Penn State will continue in November. Subsequent shipments of metadata for up to 600,000 additional volumes from UC campuses are expected in November. Ingest of these volumes will begin shortly thereafter.

HathiTrust participates in grant from Mellon Foundation

Google Summit and Internet Archive Ingest

Large-scale Search

Staff at the University of Michigan successfully indexed all volumes in HathiTrust using the newly acquired hardware. However, the official launch of the large-scale search application was postponed in order to acquire additional hardware to accommodate new index growth.

HathiTrust/OCLC Catalog

After finalizing metadata requirements for the version 1 catalog in September, the HathiTrust/OCLC Catalog team turned its attention in October to interface requirements. The team is currently finalizing interface requirements for version 1 of the catalog and has agreed to engage in collaborative usability testing during the first quarter of 2010. Meanwhile, OCLC’s e-content synchronization work for HathiTrust remains on schedule, and is expected to be completed by the end of the calendar year.

New Growth: Number of Volumes Added
Indiana University
64,614 volumes added in October, 84,132 Total
Penn State University
4,675 volumes added in October, 4,675 Total
University of California
264,710 volumes added in October, 786,414 Total
University of Michigan
206,283 volumes added in October, 3,417,264 Total
University of Wisconsin
20,430 volumes added in October, 242,705 Total
Totals
553,963 volumes added in October, 4,535,190 Total

Source: Hathi Trust