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Internet Archive Seeks Same Online Book Rights As Google 67

Miracle Jones writes "Brewster Kahle's Internet Archive has jumped on Google's 'Authors Guild' settlement and asked to be included as a party defendant, claiming that they ought to get the same rights and protections from liability that Google will receive when the settlement is approved by federal court. From the Internet Archive's letter to Judge Denny Chin: 'The Archive's text archive would greatly benefit from the same limitation of potential copyright liability that the proposed settlement provides Google. Without such a limitation, the Archive would be unable to provide some of these same services due to the uncertain legal issues surrounding orphan books.'"
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Internet Archive Seeks Same Online Book Rights As Google

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  • by gringofrijolero ( 1489395 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @12:37AM (#27633831) Journal

    But then the world's economy will collapse completely.

    I'm all for it. Everybody wins.

  • This needs to be an "open to all" arrangement, or the judge should reject the settlement.

    Even if it is "open to all comers" it still should be scrutinized before a judge signs off on it.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by corsec67 ( 627446 )

      You mean that it should be a Reasonable and Non Discriminatory License [wikipedia.org]?

    • This needs to be an "open to all" arrangement, or the judge should reject the settlement.

      Why?

      It's a bunch of private parties (the Authors Guild) deciding, after having taken a company (Google) to court, to settle their differences without having the court impose something.

      Should I get half your house just because you and your wife split it?

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        The going theory is that the Authors Guild is a Google sockpuppet.

        • The going theory is that the Authors Guild is a Google sockpuppet.

          Oh, don't mind those folks. They're just upset that Area 51 [slashdot.org] came out of the closet and nobody has seen Elvis in quite some time.

        • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @02:45AM (#27634341)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • If it was up to me, all copyright would be withdrawn at least back to the Green Line. And there would be no exclusivity to orphaned works.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by HiThere ( 15173 )

            Sounds to me like you've got it precisely. If you want to consider international IP law, ask India about patents of Neem Tree Oil.

            These laws aren't about justice. They aren't about fair recompense. They're about letting powerful corporations steal more stuff and then force you to pay for it. Ask Indonesia why it won't share it's recent strains of flu? They know that if they do, they're likely to be left to die when the next epidemic strikes. So they want to bargain for something they can count on whil

      • by LuYu ( 519260 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @01:43AM (#27634077) Homepage Journal

        Should I get half your house just because you and your wife split it?

        If you are the general public -- the We the People of the Constitution -- and I and my wife acquired the house by fraud, yes.

        I call creating anti-Constitutional international treaties and tricking Congress into implementing them in violation of the Bill of Rights fraud. If you do not, you should seriously consider getting a new dictionary. "Harmonization" is always anti-Constitutional, and the Berne Convention is anti-Free Speech.

        With "orphaned" works, you should also consider that they are the worst of both worlds. Copyrights for these works protect no authors, but they still harm society in the same way as all other copyrights: They limit Free Speech, impose monopolies, suppress free expression, and create unnecessary legal action. All of these things harm society and the Progress that copyright was intended to support. It is, quite frankly, absurd that these works are protected at all, and the Author's Guild are a band of brigands for attempting to hold hostage the public's intellectual environment for their personal enrichment through the collection of monopoly rents (suppressing competition by limiting distribution of unprofitable "orphaned" works allows publishers to keep prices high).

        Google is equally culpable in seeking to completely monopolise this information for their sole profit.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by roberthl ( 1081635 )

          They limit Free Speech, impose monopolies, suppress free expression, and create unnecessary legal action.

          How on earth does this limit "free speach" or "free expression"? In no way does it stop anyone going out and saying what they want. Furthermore, monopolies are generally awarded for innovation - something that Google has done here. No other project did anything about securing orphan works, and now that Google has their license they are all jumping on the band wagon like a pack of lions. Maybe, if archive.org or simillar went at it first, they would have the rights and this argument might not be happenin

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by Mathinker ( 909784 )

            How on earth does this limit "free speach" or "free expression"? In no way does it stop anyone going out and saying what they want.

            It does, if what they want to express happens to be a derived work based on an orphaned work.

            See The Wind Done Gone [wikipedia.org] as a case in point where copyright was used in an attempt to limit artistic (and political) expression.

            It obviously doesn't limit expression of pure ideas, per se. Was that what you meant?

          • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

            by dissy ( 172727 )

            How on earth does this limit "free speach" or "free expression"? In no way does it stop anyone going out and saying what they want.

            I dunno, go ask the pirate bay owners.

            They said what they wanted, which is even legal on the books (both before and after the trial, no laws got changed here) and they were still sentenced 1 year in jail and fines.

            I'd say copyright totally stops you from saying what you want, when you can get a year in jail for saying "i know someone who knows someone who [...,n] who has the work i'm talking about, and my only data i have stored outside of by brain about this work is a little hash number only 64 digits ling

        • I call creating anti-Constitutional international treaties and tricking Congress into implementing them in violation of the Bill of Rights fraud.

          Anti-Constitutional treaties are not allowed by the Constitution. Treaties are effectively co-equal with federal law, subject to the Constitution, and judicial review can overturn them.

          This is a common misunderstanding based on erroneous parsing of article VI. When article VI says "and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding", "the Constitution" is referring to the "the Constitution... of any State". Not only

          • by LuYu ( 519260 )

            Then please explain how the Berne Convention derivative work "rights" implemented in the 1976 Copyright Act do not violate the First Amendment as these "rights" apply to speech that has yet to be uttered. If I read a book and tell my friend about it on AIM, I may not get sued for it, but technically speaking, it is a derivative work -- especially if I mention the characters and the plot.

            Also, since everything on the Internet is, for the purposes of copyright law "fixed in tangible form", how can I quote

            • There is not a court in existence, including SCOTUS, that would strike down the 1976 Copyright Act as unconstitutional -- even though it plainly is.

              If you convinced the court that it was unconstitutional, it would strike down the act. The court didn't uphold CTEA just because it was driven by a treaty, the court upheld it because the court wasn't given what it considered a compelling argument for unconstitutionality.

              If Lessig is not up to such a challenge, who is?

              Lessig believes he could have, but that he screwed up by not giving the court the right argument. He focused on the "limited times" aspect, but the court found that the time is limited, even if repeated extensions could make it effectivel

          • This may piss off the country or countries we signed the treaty with, but that's just too bad.

            Many a peace treaty has been signed and enforced at the barrel of a gun, even though the treaty violated the constitution of the country that signed it.

            It's not the case here, but sooner or later, we will sign a treaty with another country, our courts will overturn it, and they will say "change your constitution, or we'll replace it."

            Only through international goodwill or by having one of the strongest military cap

      • Your analogy ignores the fact that the court system, in this case, is recognizing the Authors' Guild as the default representative of all authors, regardless if these authors actually have any formal relationship to it. Because of the court is granting this special right to the Authors' Guild, it might very well be the case that the court has the ability, or even an obligation, to regulate how the Authors' Guild does business.

        A better analogy would be to compare the Authors' Guild to a local telecom monopol

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by russotto ( 537200 )

        It's a bunch of private parties (the Authors Guild) deciding, after having taken a company (Google) to court, to settle their differences without having the court impose something.

        If the settlement only covered Author's Guild authors, that would be true. It doesn't. It covers ALL copyright holders. A sues B and the settlement extinguishes C,D, and Es claims (past, present or future) as well.

    • by julesh ( 229690 )

      This needs to be an "open to all" arrangement, or the judge should reject the settlement.

      The judge doesn't have the power to sign off on an open-to-all arrangement. He can only order a settlement between the named parties in the case, in this case the class of all book copyright and electronic distribution right holders and google (plus, if he permits the addition, internet archive).

      • I'm not a class action law expert and ongoing changes to the law may mean this is no longer true, but at one time class actions could be brought where the defendants were a class.

        Right now it's Author's Guild et al vs. Google, with the Author's Guild and other named plaintiffs representing authors and publishers.

        If the judge turned it into "Author's Guild et al. vs. Google et al" with Google representing all parties who may wish to publish such works in the future, then it would, in effect, force the settle

        • by julesh ( 229690 )

          I'm not a class action law expert and ongoing changes to the law may mean this is no longer true, but at one time class actions could be brought where the defendants were a class.

          Even if he did this (which I wasn't aware he could do, but it does appear to be possible), the settlement would only apply (as I understand it) to those who are members of the class at the time the settlement is finalised. Such a settlement would not be particularly useful, AFAICS.

          • by davidwr ( 791652 )

            I was thinking in terms of the defendant class being "anyone with a pulse." True, it wouldn't apply to future people, but it would be useful.

  • This is great news, but why is it that there appears to be no link to download the PDF of the document. On the linked site, that is annoying enough, but on the Open Content Alliance website, it seems purely hypocritical. How can the "Open" Content Alliance link to a proprietary, display only website? Where is the text? How annoying.

    Because of the mentioned annoyance, I did not read the brief, but if it was not included in there, I think they should have asked for the protection to extended to all lib

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by julesh ( 229690 )

      How can the "Open" Content Alliance link to a proprietary, display only website? Where is the text? How annoying.

      Err... what's "view only" about it? Click the download button above the scribd viewer and you're presented options to download in pdf or plain text.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        While you may be technically correct, scribd is a *very* annoying site that I have removed from my Google results. Hmm, let's wrap the text up in a fancy thingamajiggy that takes ages to load and can't be easily scrolled or resized.

  • It should be open! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Jane Q. Public ( 1010737 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @12:56AM (#27633917)
    What about the Gutenberg Project, and similar collections?
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by ColdWetDog ( 752185 )

      What about the Gutenberg Project, and similar collections?

      They've already got one [gutenberg.org].

    • by FrostDust ( 1009075 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @02:55AM (#27634385)

      The AG-Google agreement wouldn't affect Gutenberg at all. The Gutenberg Project only deals with works that are either public domain or works where the author gave permission for GP to use the works.

      The reason the Author's Guild got upset with Google and eventually reached a settlement with them was because Google was dealing with "orphaned" works. These were books that, while restricted in distribution by copyright laws, were out of print for one reason or another. While Google saw this as part of their mission to increase the availiblity of information, the AG saw this as an encroachment on the rights of their members.

      • by martin-boundary ( 547041 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @06:56AM (#27635433)
        Technically, all works are public domain eventually (even if right now this can mean 150 years or more after publication). This implies that the author's guild (and anybody else who claims copyright) is only a caretaker of the work for up to the next 150 years or so. If the work is no longer available (in existence) in 150 years, then Gutenberg will not be able to digitize it then. If that happens, then the caretaker should be held responsible, but probably the caretaker will be long gone.

        Thus Gutenberg should definitely worry about getting the ability to digitize orphaned works as soon as possible. 150 years is a long time. In the last 150 years, there was civil war in the US and many in other places, and two huge world wars, including one famous for book burning.

        • Why should a third party have to ensure something exists for *you* in 150 years? You can always get your own private archival copy today, digitize it and just not publish it until the copyright has expired...
  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @01:07AM (#27633947) Journal
    Ultimately, the issue of Orphan works will have to be attacked generically, rather than outfit by outfit.

    Given the length of copyright term and the ever decreasing costs of storage, there are works, and will continue to be works that are within the term of copyright, but which have no (knows) extant owner. This is an issue.

    Without an extant owner, it isn't even possible to ask for licensing permission, so the work will necessarily go unused (bootlegging excepted). Unless one considers absolutist copyright maximalism to be a virtue for its own sake, enforcing copyright on such works is insane.

    The trick is, you don't want to make it too easy for a work to be declared orphaned. "Oh, Mr. Fungus, our statutory-search-for-author-notice ran for an entire month in the East Arkansas Hog Breeder Gazette and intelligencer and the North Anglian Lady's Christian Temperance Quarterly! What more reasonable a search could you possibly expect?"
    • by johannesg ( 664142 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @01:54AM (#27634143)

      Unless one considers absolutist copyright maximalism to be a virtue for its own sake, enforcing copyright on such works is insane.

      Say you are a really large copyright organisation. Not only are you competing with other, similar organisations, but you are also competing with the public domain. Getting rid of that competition means getting rid of the public domain, which is what they are doing.

      So yes, I imagine they are really all in favor of enforcing that absolutist copyright maximalism.

    • by Atlantis-Rising ( 857278 ) on Sunday April 19, 2009 @02:37AM (#27634309) Homepage

      The issue seems fairly obvious to solve, to me: You, as the copyright holder, must submit a copy of the document to the Library of Congress for storage in high-resolution (or whatever the content equivalent is), and must send them a registered letter or similar once a year for your work to be declared not orphaned.

      If they don't receive a letter two years in a row, it becomes orphaned, but if you keep sending in letters, your copyright will continue until it expires.

      A due-diligence search would therefore simply involve searching the LOC.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by sFurbo ( 1361249 )
        How does that work for authors who are not US citizens? If they need to send it to the Library of Congress, why can't every other national library demand the same? If you have to take it to the national library of your own country, a full search of all national libraries are needed to determin the orphan-staus of a work. Of course, they could make a collaboration to make the search easier, but if you can't get them all to have the same terms, it is going to be a mess.
        • If a work is published in, say, France, then it makes perfect sense to do a search for it in the French national library. More generally, written works tend to have a copyright notice. It would be trivial to require authors to include in the notice an identifier for the relevant library where the reference copy is stored. E.g.

          Copyright (c)2009 martin-boundary, Bibliotheque nationale de France.

          • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            1) What about stuff that's published on the Internet?
            2) What about stuff that's published under, say, a CC licence?

            I'm particularly concerned about things like art - photography, web comics, drawings, and so on. It's unreasonable IMO to expect people to submit notifications that yes, they would like for their copyright to remain every year for thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of items, and this is doubly true for those who already publish under CC licences and don't even intend to sell things for a prof

            • Note that most of those rules were introduced in a time before computers, when it was seriously impractical to make thousands of submissions.

              I think it can be argued that we have no such limitations these days. Take a photograph, or a web comic, drawing, and so on as a digital image, or a text composition in a unicode text file etc. The national copyright registration office could keep a copy of it registered to your name, and you could submit all your digital files electronically. You could start the tra

            • I somehow think you are not entirely tracking on my argument, but I can't exactly put a finger on where.

              1) I don't think it's unreasonable to deal with notifications for large numbers of documents, with the Internet and computers. Just submit a list of all your copyright numbers.

              2)The CC license is a bastardization anyway. If you're not willing to continue to expend effort for things to remain under CC license (for which you presumably have a reason) then let them fall under orphaned works. Orphaned works d

        • How does that work for authors who are not US citizens? If they need to send it to the Library of Congress, why can't every other national library demand the same? If you have to take it to the national library of your own country, a full search of all national libraries are needed to determin the orphan-staus of a work. Of course, they could make a collaboration to make the search easier, but if you can't get them all to have the same terms, it is going to be a mess.

          Well, we are presumably talking about

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by dissy ( 172727 )

        The issue seems fairly obvious to solve, to me: You, as the copyright holder, must submit a copy of the document to the Library of Congress for storage in high-resolution (or whatever the content equivalent is), and must send them a registered letter or similar once a year for your work to be declared not orphaned.

        Woah woah woah! What is this?! Using the Library of Congress for its original intended purpose, instead of as a unit of measurement???

        You my friend have just made many an enemy on slashdot from both sides of the fence :{

      • by Eil ( 82413 )

        That's an obvious solution but not really a workable one for two reasons. First, there's the sheer amount of copyrighted work out there. The LOC is widely regarded as possessing the largest quantity of copyrighted books and other media on the planet but percentage-wise, I'm sure its only a fraction of what's actually out there. Yes, the LOC receives a copy of every work registered through the US Copyright Office but you don't have to register with the USCO in order for the work in order to be protected. (Al

        • Then there's the burden on the copyright holder. Presently, the bar for copyrighting a work is very low. Basically, the work is copyrighted at the time of creation. This is a good thing. It means that anyone willing to create a work for the benefit of society and/or themselves can do so without any extra effort or onerous paperwork. This not only encourages contribution, it makes copyrighting as we know it today possible. If authors had to submit documents every year for everything they held copyright on, it would be an insurmountable task for many. Just about any written word put on paper (or screen) by a company is copyrighted. The average company wouldn't be able to keep up with this, let alone websites, blog authors, independent artists, research firms, record labels, and even regular Slashdot posters.

          And if that works would lose copyright protection, why precisely would that be a problem ? The number of "serendipitous successes", that is work that is a unexpected success and whose authors benefit from copyright rewards after must surely be a lot smaller than the number of "orphan" works that would benefit society to access. I myself, although a published author, would very much agree to a copyright statute that would require active management to keep the copyright monopoly on reproduction of owns work.

        • I think you are misreading my comment- I am not suggesting that documents must be registered to be covered under copyright, but that they must be registered and maintained to avoid being considered orphans.

          • But once a document is considered an orphan (that is, automatically if it's never registered under your plan), the author loses the copyright to it to Google. That's arguably worse than if it was never covered by copyright in the first place.
      • by PMuse ( 320639 )

        The issue seems fairly obvious to solve, to me: You, as the copyright holder, . . . must send them a registered letter or similar once a year for your work to be declared not orphaned.

        Something much like your solution was used in the U.S. for 186 years. From 1790 to 1976, [wikipedia.org] holders of U.S. copyrights were required to send a letter renewing their rights at the half-way point in the term. If they failed to do so, their copyright expired. In 1976, that solution was deemed too onerous, too prone to error, too disrespectful of inalienable "moral rights", or just plain too unprofitable, and was replaced with automatic copyrights that don't require registration and last forever.* It wasn't a

    • Given the length of copyright term and the ever decreasing costs of storage, there are works, and will continue to be works that are within the term of copyright, but which have no (knows) extant owner. This is an issue.

      Why is it an issue? The law guarantees protection for the owner of the rights - not access to the works by the public.

      What you and this farcical 'settlement' want to do is to subvert the law so that rather protecting the rights holder you create a situation where the author has what

      • "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries"

        At least in the US(where I'm writing), the law guarantees protection for the owner of the rights entirely as a strategic measure. As much as the "intellectual property" pushers would like it to be otherwise, copyright is not property in the same sense as real property(and, even there, there are complications like Adverse possession)
    • I believe The Public Domain Enhancement Act [eldred.cc] does a good job of addressing orphaned works: it requires a $1 fee be paid no earlier than 50 years after the work was published and it creates a searchable database of works and copyright holders. Legislators should be pushed to champion this bill again (and again) to get it through Congress. One-time trying doesn't do the job (as we've all seen the corporate copyright holders show us). I concur with proponents of the PDEA that most copyright holders will not
  • While I am not a lawyer, www.archive.org (and variously named predecessors) is "prior art" when it comes to storing huge amounts of electronic data, as, I am sure we will see very soon, many many many other parties.

    • www.archive.org (and variously named predecessors) is "prior art" when it comes to storing huge amounts of electronic data.

      Isn't the phrase "prior art" only used in patent law?

      So, if archive.org is indeed prior art, this only means that no one should be able to patent the business method of archiving the Internet.

      (Maybe except archive.org, but they have probably been practicing that business method for so long that the patenting window of opportunity has expired.)

      I'm not sure why you bring this up in a discussion of copyright.

  • Personally, I think the agreement and the lawsuit should be thrown out. As per boingboing (http://www.boingboing.net/2009/04/17/google-book-search-s-1.html), this settlement potentially, baring something unforeseen, gives google a near monopoly on search and distribution on the majority of all the books ever published. While that alone is a pretty good argument for the settlement to be voided, the fact that an organization which only represents roughly 8000 writers out of all the writers in the world is c

    • by dargon ( 105684 )

      Whoops my bad, the settlement only covers the US / American writers, however, just the same, I'm pretty sure that the writers guild should have no say over orphaned works

  • Heh. (Score:4, Funny)

    by Arancaytar ( 966377 ) <arancaytar.ilyaran@gmail.com> on Sunday April 19, 2009 @03:47AM (#27634595) Homepage

    asked to be included as a party defendant

    "Hey! No fair suing Google and not us. We want to be sued to! SUE US DAMMIT!"

  • Orphans forever! (Score:2, Interesting)

    Hopefully the judge will do the sensible thing, which is to give Internet Archive or whoever else wants the right to publish orphans and pay royalties for it, the right to do so. The Fiction Circus blog posting is truly silly. The Author's Guild was not set up by Google, that's for sure. Google just wanted to index all the books and provide links to where you could buy them. The Author's Guild (a long standing and very backward looking organization) sued, claiming that indexing was a violation of copyri

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