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Wikipedia

Google Books

Google Books (previously known as Google Book Search, Google Print, and by its code-name Project Ocean)[1] is a service from Google Inc. that searches the full text of books and magazines that Google has scanned, converted to text using optical character recognition (OCR), and stored in its digital database.[2] Books are provided either by publishers and authors through the Google Books Partner Program, or by Google's library partners through the Library Project.[3] Additionally, Google has partnered with a number of magazine publishers to digitize their archives.[4][5]

Google Books
Screenshot
Type of site
Digital library
OwnerGoogle
URLbooks.google.com
LaunchedOctober 2004; 18 years ago (2004-10) (as Google Print)
Current statusActive

The Publisher Program was first known as Google Print when it was introduced at the Frankfurt Book Fair in October 2004. The Google Books Library Project, which scans works in the collections of library partners and adds them to the digital inventory, was announced in December 2004.

The Google Books initiative has been hailed for its potential to offer unprecedented access to what may become the largest online body of human knowledge[6][7] and promoting the democratization of knowledge.[8] However, it has also been criticized for potential copyright violations,[8][9] and lack of editing to correct the many errors introduced into the scanned texts by the OCR process.

As of October 2019, Google celebrated 15 years of Google Books and provided the number of scanned books as more than 40 million titles.[10] Google estimated in 2010 that there were about 130 million distinct titles in the world,[11][12] and stated that it intended to scan all of them.[11] However, the scanning process in American academic libraries has slowed since the aughts.[13][14] Google Book's scanning efforts have been subject to litigation, including Authors Guild v. Google, a class-action lawsuit in the United States, decided in Google's favor (see below). This was a major case that came close to changing copyright practices for orphan works in the United States.[15]

Details

Results from Google Books show up in both the universal Google Search and in the dedicated Google Books search website (books.google.com).

In response to search queries, Google Books allows users to view full pages from books in which the search terms appear if the book is out of copyright or if the copyright owner has given permission. If Google believes the book is still under copyright, a user sees "snippets" of text around the queried search terms. All instances of the search terms in the book text appear with a yellow highlight.

The four access levels used on Google Books are:[16]

  • Full view: Books in the public domain are available for "full view" and can be downloaded for free. In-print books acquired through the Partner Program are also available for full view if the publisher has given permission, although this is rare.
  • Preview: For in-print books where permission has been granted, the number of viewable pages is limited to a "preview" set by a variety of access restrictions and security measures, some based on user-tracking. Usually, the publisher can set the percentage of the book available for preview.[17] Users are restricted from copying, downloading or printing book previews. A watermark reading "Copyrighted material" appears at the bottom of pages. All books acquired through the Partner Program are available for preview.
  • Snippet view: A "snippet view" – two to three lines of text surrounding the queried search term – is displayed in cases where Google does not have permission of the copyright owner to display a preview. This could be because Google cannot identify the owner or the owner declined permission. If a search term appears many times in a book, Google displays no more than three snippets, thus preventing the user from viewing too much of the book. Also, Google does not display any snippets for certain reference books, such as dictionaries, where the display of even snippets can harm the market for the work. Google maintains that no permission is required under copyright law to display the snippet view.[18]
  • No preview: Google also displays search results for books that have not been digitized. As these books have not been scanned, their text is not searchable and only the metadata such as the title, author, publisher, number of pages, ISBN, subject and copyright information, and in some cases, a table of contents and book summary is available. In effect, this is similar to an online library card catalog.[3]

In response to criticism from groups such as the American Association of Publishers and the Authors Guild, Google announced an opt-out policy in August 2005, through which copyright owners could provide a list of titles that they do not want scanned, and the request would be respected. The company also stated that it would not scan any in-copyright books between August and 1 November 2005, to provide the owners with the opportunity to decide which books to exclude from the Project. Thus, copyright owners have three choices with respect to any work:[18]

  1. It can participate in the Partner Program to make a book available for preview or full view, in which case it would share revenue derived from the display of pages from the work in response to user queries.
  2. It can let Google scan the book under the Library Project and display snippets in response to user queries.
  3. It can opt out of the Library Project, in which case Google will not scan the book. If the book has already been scanned, Google will reset its access level as 'No preview'.

Most scanned works are no longer in print or commercially available.[19]

In addition to procuring books from libraries, Google also obtains books from its publisher partners, through the "Partner Program" – designed to help publishers and authors promote their books. Publishers and authors submit either a digital copy of their book in EPUB or PDF format, or a print copy to Google, which is made available on Google Books for preview. The publisher can control the percentage of the book available for preview, with the minimum being 20%. They can also choose to make the book fully viewable, and even allow users to download a PDF copy. Books can also be made available for sale on Google Play.[3] Unlike the Library Project, this does not raise any copyright concerns as it is conducted pursuant to an agreement with the publisher. The publisher can choose to withdraw from the agreement at any time.[18]

For many books, Google Books displays the original page numbers. However, Tim Parks, writing in The New York Review of Books in 2014, noted that Google had stopped providing page numbers for many recent publications (likely the ones acquired through the Partner Program) "presumably in alliance with the publishers, in order to force those of us who need to prepare footnotes to buy paper editions."[20]

Scanning of books

The project began in 2002 under the codename Project Ocean. Google co-founder Larry Page had always had an interest in digitizing books. When he and Marissa Mayer began experimenting with book scanning in 2002, it took 40 minutes for them to digitize a 300-page book. But soon after the technology had been developed to the extent that scanning operators could scan up to 6000 pages an hour.[15]

Google established designated scanning centers to which books were transported by trucks. The stations could digitize at the rate of 1,000 pages per hour. The books were placed in a custom-built mechanical cradle that adjusted the book spine in place while an array of lights and optical instruments scanned the two open pages. Each page would have two cameras directed at it capturing the image, while a range finder LIDAR overlaid a three-dimensional laser grid on the book's surface to capture the curvature of the paper. A human operator would turn the pages by hand, using a foot pedal to take the photographs. With no need to flatten the pages or align them perfectly, Google's system not only reached a remarkable efficiency and speed but also helped protect the fragile collections from being over-handled. Afterwards, the crude images went through three levels of processing: first, de-warping algorithms used the LIDAR data fix the pages' curvature. Then, optical character recognition (OCR) software transformed the raw images into text, and, lastly, another round of algorithms extracted page numbers, footnotes, illustrations and diagrams.[15]

Many of the books are scanned using a customized Elphel 323 camera[21][22] at a rate of 1,000 pages per hour.[23] A patent awarded to Google in 2009 revealed that Google had come up with an innovative system for scanning books that uses two cameras and infrared light to automatically correct for the curvature of pages in a book. By constructing a 3D model of each page and then "de-warping" it, Google is able to present flat-looking pages without having to really make the pages flat, which requires the use of destructive methods such as unbinding or glass plates to individually flatten each page, which is inefficient for large scale scanning.[24][25]

Google decided to omit color information in favour of better spatial resolution, as most out-of-copyright books at the time did not contain colors. Each page image was passed through algorithms that distinguished the text and illustration regions. Text regions were then processed via OCR to enable full-text searching. Google expended considerable resources in coming up with optimal compression techniques, aiming for high image quality while keeping the file sizes minimal to enable access by internet users with low bandwidth.[26]

Website functionality

For each work, Google Books automatically generates an overview page. This page displays information extracted from the book—its publishing details, a high frequency word map, the table of contents—as well as secondary material, such as summaries, reader reviews (not readable in the mobile version of the website), and links to other relevant texts. A visitor to the page, for instance, might see a list of books that share a similar genre and theme, or they might see a list of current scholarship on the book. This content, moreover, offers interactive possibilities for users signed into their Google account. They can export the bibliographic data and citations in standard formats, write their own reviews, add it to their library to be tagged, organized, and shared with other people.[27][28] Thus, Google Books collects these more interpretive elements from a range of sources, including the users, third-party sites like Goodreads, and often the book's author and publisher.[29]

In fact, to encourage authors to upload their own books, Google has added several functionalities to the website. The authors can allow visitors to download their ebook for free, or they can set their own purchase price. They can change the price back and forth, offering discounts whenever it suits them. Also, if a book's author chooses to add an ISBN, LCCN or OCLC record number, the service will update the book's url to include it. Then, the author can set a specific page as the link's anchor. This option makes their book more easily discoverable.

Ngram Viewer

The Ngram Viewer is a service connected to Google Books that graphs the frequency of word usage across their book collection. The service is important for historians and linguists as it can provide an inside look into human culture through word use throughout time periods.[30] This program has fallen under criticism because of errors in the metadata used in the program.[31]

Content issues and criticism

The project has received criticism that its stated aim of preserving orphaned and out-of-print works is at risk due to scanned data having errors and such problems not being solved.[32][33]

Users can report errors in Google scanned books at support.google.com/books/partner/troubleshooter/2983879.

Scanning errors

 
A hand scanned in a Google book

The scanning process is subject to errors. For example, some pages may be unreadable, upside down, or in the wrong order. Scholars have even reported crumpled pages, obscuring thumbs and fingers, and smeared or blurry images.[34] On this issue, a declaration from Google at the end of scanned books says:

The digitization at the most basic level is based on page images of the physical books. To make this book available as an ePub formatted file we have taken those page images and extracted the text using Optical Character Recognition (or OCR for short) technology. The extraction of text from page images is a difficult engineering task. Smudges on the physical books' pages, fancy fonts, old fonts, torn pages, etc. can all lead to errors in the extracted text. Imperfect OCR is only the first challenge in the ultimate goal of moving from collections of page images to extracted-text based books. Our computer algorithms also have to automatically determine the structure of the book (what are the headers and footers, where images are placed, whether text is verse or prose, and so forth). Getting this right allows us to render the book in a way that follows the format of the original book. Despite our best efforts you may see spelling mistakes, garbage characters, extraneous images, or missing pages in this book. Based on our estimates, these errors should not prevent you from enjoying the content of the book. The technical challenges of automatically constructing a perfect book are daunting, but we continue to make enhancements to our OCR and book structure extraction technologies.[35]

As of 2009, Google stated that they would start using reCAPTCHA to help fix the errors found in Google Book scans. This method would only improve scanned words that are hard to recognize because of the scanning process and cannot solve errors such as turned pages or blocked words.[36]

Scanning errors have inspired works of art such as published collections of anomalous pages and a Tumblr blog.[37]

Errors in metadata

Scholars have frequently reported rampant errors in the metadata information on Google Books – including misattributed authors and erroneous dates of publication. Geoffrey Nunberg, a linguist researching on the changes in word usage over time noticed that a search for books published before 1950 and containing the word "internet" turned up an unlikely 527 results. Woody Allen is mentioned in 325 books ostensibly published before he was born. Google responded to Nunberg by blaming the bulk of errors on the outside contractors.[31]

Other metadata errors reported include publication dates before the author's birth (e.g. 182 works by Charles Dickens prior to his birth in 1812); incorrect subject classifications (an edition of Moby Dick found under "computers", a biography of Mae West classified under "religion"), conflicting classifications (10 editions of Whitman's Leaves of Grass all classified as both "fiction" and "nonfiction"), incorrectly spelled titles, authors, and publishers (Moby Dick: or the White "Wall"), and metadata for one book incorrectly appended to a completely different book (the metadata for an 1818 mathematical work leads to a 1963 romance novel).[38][39]

A review of the author, title, publisher, and publication year metadata elements for 400 randomly selected Google Books records was undertaken. The results show 36% of sampled books in the digitization project contained metadata errors. This error rate is higher than one would expect to find in a typical library online catalog.[40]

The overall error rate of 36.75% found in this study suggests that Google Books' metadata has a high rate of error. While "major" and "minor" errors are a subjective distinction based on the somewhat indeterminate concept of "findability", the errors found in the four metadata elements examined in this study should all be considered major.[40]

Metadata errors based on incorrect scanned dates makes research using the Google Books Project database difficult. Google has shown only limited interest in cleaning up these errors.[41]

Language issues

Some European politicians and intellectuals have criticized Google's effort on linguistic imperialism grounds. They argue that because the vast majority of books proposed to be scanned are in English, it will result in disproportionate representation of natural languages in the digital world. German, Russian, French, and Spanish, for instance, are popular languages in scholarship. The disproportionate online emphasis on English, however, could shape access to historical scholarship, and, ultimately, the growth and direction of future scholarship. Among these critics is Jean-Noël Jeanneney, the former president of the Bibliothèque nationale de France.[42][43]

Google Books versus Google Scholar

While Google Books has digitized large numbers of journal back issues, its scans do not include the metadata required for identifying specific articles in specific issues. This has led the makers of Google Scholar to start their own program to digitize and host older journal articles (in agreement with their publishers).[44]

Library partners

The Google Books Library Project is aimed at scanning and making searchable the collections of several major research libraries.[45] Along with bibliographic information, snippets of text from a book are often viewable. If a book is out of copyright and in the public domain, the book is fully available to read or download.[16]

In-copyright books scanned through the Library Project are made available on Google Books for snippet view. Regarding the quality of scans, Google acknowledges that they are "not always of sufficiently high quality" to be offered for sale on Google Play. Also, because of supposed technical constraints, Google does not replace scans with higher quality versions that may be provided by the publishers.[46]

The project is the subject of the Authors Guild v. Google lawsuit, filed in 2005 and ruled in favor of Google in 2013, and again, on appeal, in 2015.

Copyright owners can claim the rights for a scanned book and make it available for preview or full view (by "transferring" it to their Partner Program account), or request Google to prevent the book text from being searched.[46]

The number of institutions participating in the Library Project has grown since its inception.[47]

Initial partners

 
Notice about the project at Michigan University Library
  • Harvard University, Harvard University Library[48]
    The Harvard University Library and Google conducted a pilot throughout 2005. The project continued, with the aim of increasing online access to the holdings of the Harvard University Library, which includes more than 15.8 million volumes. While physical access to Harvard's library materials is generally restricted to current Harvard students, faculty, and researchers, or to scholars who can come to Cambridge, the Harvard-Google Project has been designed to enable both members of the Harvard community and users everywhere to discover works in the Harvard collection.
  • University of Michigan, University of Michigan Library[49]
    As of March 2012, 5.5 million volumes were scanned.[50]
  • New York Public Library[51]
    In this pilot program, NYPL is working with Google to offer a collection of its public domain books, which will be scanned in their entirety and made available for free to the public online. Users will be able to search and browse the full text of these works. When the scanning process is complete, the books may be accessed from both The New York Public Library's website and from the Google search engine.[51]
  • University of Oxford, Bodleian Library[52]
  • Stanford University, Stanford University Libraries (SULAIR)[53]

Additional partners

Other institutional partners have joined the project since the partnership was first announced:[54]

History

2002: A group of team members at Google officially launch the "secret 'books' project."[73] Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page came up with the idea that later became Google Books while still graduate students at Stanford in 1996. The history page on the Google Books website describes their initial vision for this project: "in a future world in which vast collections of books are digitized, people would use a 'web crawler' to index the books' content and analyze the connections between them, determining any given book's relevance and usefulness by tracking the number and quality of citations from other books."[73] This team visited the sites of some of the larger digitization efforts at that time including the Library of Congress's American Memory Project, Project Gutenberg, and the Universal Library to find out how they work, as well as the University of Michigan, Page's alma mater, and the base for such digitization projects as JSTOR and Making of America. In a conversation with the at that time University President Mary Sue Coleman, when Page found out that the university's current estimate for scanning all the library's volumes was 1,000 years, Page reportedly told Coleman that he "believes Google can help make it happen in six."[73]

2003: The team works to develop a high-speed scanning process as well as software for resolving issues in odd type sizes, unusual fonts, and "other unexpected peculiarities."[73]

December 2004: Google signaled an extension to its Google Print initiative known as the Google Print Library Project.[47] Google announced partnerships with several high-profile university and public libraries, including the University of Michigan, Harvard (Harvard University Library), Stanford (Green Library), Oxford (Bodleian Library), and the New York Public Library. According to press releases and university librarians, Google planned to digitize and make available through its Google Books service approximately 15 million volumes within a decade. The announcement soon triggered controversy, as publisher and author associations challenged Google's plans to digitize, not just books in the public domain, but also titles still under copyright.

September–October 2005: Two lawsuits against Google charge that the company has not respected copyrights and has failed to properly compensate authors and publishers. One is a class action suit on behalf of authors (Authors Guild v. Google, September 20, 2005) and the other is a civil lawsuit brought by five large publishers and the Association of American Publishers. (McGraw Hill v. Google, October 19, 2005)[9][74][75][76][77][78]

November 2005: Google changed the name of this service from Google Print to Google Book Search.[79] Its program enabling publishers and authors to include their books in the service was renamed Google Books Partner Program,[80] and the partnership with libraries became Google Books Library Project.

2006: Google added a "download a pdf" button to all its out-of-copyright, public domain books. It also added a new browsing interface along with new "About this Book" pages.[73]

August 2006: The University of California System announced that it would join the Books digitization project. This includes a portion of the 34 million volumes within the approximately 100 libraries managed by the System.[81]

September 2006: The Complutense University of Madrid became the first Spanish-language library to join the Google Books Library Project.[82]

October 2006: The University of Wisconsin–Madison announced that it would join the Book Search digitization project along with the Wisconsin Historical Society Library. Combined, the libraries have 7.2 million holdings.[83]

November 2006: The University of Virginia joined the project. Its libraries contain more than five million volumes and more than 17 million manuscripts, rare books and archives.[84]

January 2007: The University of Texas at Austin announced that it would join the Book Search digitization project. At least one million volumes would be digitized from the university's 13 library locations.

March 2007: The Bavarian State Library announced a partnership with Google to scan more than a million public domain and out-of-print works in German as well as English, French, Italian, Latin, and Spanish.[85]

May 2007: A book digitizing project partnership was announced jointly by Google and the Cantonal and University Library of Lausanne.[86]

May 2007: The Boekentoren Library of Ghent University announced that it would participate with Google in digitizing and making digitized versions of 19th century books in the French and Dutch languages available online.[87]

May 2007: Mysore University announces Google will digitize over 800,000 books and manuscripts–including around 100,000 manuscripts written in Sanskrit or Kannada on both paper and palm leaves.[68]

June 2007: The Committee on Institutional Cooperation (rebranded as the Big Ten Academic Alliance in 2016) announced that its twelve member libraries would participate in scanning 10 million books over the course of the next six years.[58]

July 2007: Keio University became Google's first library partner in Japan with the announcement that they would digitize at least 120,000 public domain books.[88]

August 2007: Google announced that it would digitize up to 500,000 both copyrighted and public domain items from Cornell University Library. Google would also provide a digital copy of all works scanned to be incorporated into the university's own library system.[89]

September 2007: Google added a feature that allows users to share snippets of books that are in the public domain. The snippets may appear exactly as they do in the scan of the book, or as plain text.[90]

September 2007: Google debuted a new feature called "My Library" which allows users to create personal customized libraries, selections of books that they can label, review, rate, or full-text search.[91]

December 2007: Columbia University was added as a partner in digitizing public domain works.[92]

May 2008: Microsoft tapered off and planned to end its scanning project, which had reached 750,000 books and 80 million journal articles.[93]

October 2008: A settlement was reached between the publishing industry and Google after two years of negotiation. Google agreed to compensate authors and publishers in exchange for the right to make millions of books available to the public.[9][94]

October 2008: The HathiTrust "Shared Digital Repository" (later known as the HathiTrust Digital Library) is launched jointly by the Committee on Institutional Cooperation and the 11 university libraries in the University of California system, all of which were Google partner libraries, in order to archive and provide academic access to books from their collections scanned by Google and others.[95]

November 2008: Google reached the 7 million book mark for items scanned by Google and by their publishing partners. 1 million were in full preview mode and 1 million were fully viewable and downloadable public domain works. About five million were out of print.[19][96][97]

December 2008: Google announced the inclusion of magazines in Google Books. Titles include New York Magazine, Ebony, and Popular Mechanics[98][99]

February 2009: Google launched a mobile version of Google Book Search, allowing iPhone and Android phone users to read over 1.5 million public domain works in the US (and over 500,000 outside the US) using a mobile browser. Instead of page images, the plain text of the book is displayed.[100]

May 2009: At the annual BookExpo convention in New York, Google signaled its intent to introduce a program that would enable publishers to sell digital versions of their newest books direct to consumers through Google.[101]

December 2009: A French court shut down the scanning of copyrighted books published in France, saying this violated copyright laws. It was the first major legal loss for the scanning project.[102]

April 2010: Visual artists were not included in the previous lawsuit and settlement, are the plaintiff groups in another lawsuit, and say they intend to bring more than just Google Books under scrutiny. "The new class action," read the statement, "goes beyond Google's Library Project, and includes Google's other systematic and pervasive infringements of the rights of photographers, illustrators and other visual artists."[103]

May 2010: It was reported that Google would launch a digital book store called Google Editions.[104] It would compete with Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Apple and other electronic book retailers with its own e-book store. Unlike others, Google Editions would be completely online and would not require a specific device (such as kindle, Nook, or iPad).

June 2010: Google passed 12 million books scanned.[11]

August 2010: It was announced that Google intends to scan all known existing 129,864,880 books within a decade, amounting to over 4 billion digital pages and 2 trillion words in total.[11]

December 2010: Google eBooks (Google Editions) was launched in the US.[105]

December 2010: Google launched the Ngram Viewer, which collects and graphs data on word usage across its book collection.[30]

March 2011: A federal judge rejected the settlement reached between the publishing industry and Google.[106]

March 2012: Google passed 20 million books scanned.[107][108]

March 2012: Google reached a settlement with publishers.[109]

January 2013: The documentary Google and the World Brain was shown at the Sundance Film Festival.[110]

November 2013: Ruling in Authors Guild v. Google, US District Judge Denny Chin sides with Google, citing fair use.[111] The authors said they would appeal.[112]

October 2015: The appeals court sided with Google, declaring that Google did not violate copyright law.[113] According to the New York Times, Google has scanned more than 25 million books.[13]

April 2016: The US Supreme Court declined to hear the Authors Guild's appeal, which means the lower court's decision stood, and Google would be allowed to scan library books and display snippets in search results without violating the law.[114]

Status

Google has been quite secretive regarding its plans on the future of the Google Books project. Scanning operations had been slowing down since at least 2012, as confirmed by the librarians at several of Google's partner institutions. At University of Wisconsin, the speed had reduced to less than half of what it was in 2006. However, the librarians have said that the dwindling pace could be a natural result of maturation of the project – initially stacks of books were entirely taken up for scanning whereas now only the titles that had not already been scanned needed to be considered.[50] The company's own Google Books timeline page did not mention anything after 2007 even in 2017, and the Google Books blog was merged into the Google Search blog in 2012.[115]

Despite winning the decade-long litigation in 2017, The Atlantic has said that Google has "all but shut down its scanning operation."[15] In April 2017, Wired reported that there were only a few Google employees working on the project, and new books were still being scanned, but at a significantly lower rate. It commented that the decade-long legal battle had caused Google to lose its ambition.[115]

Legal issues

Through the project, library books were being digitized somewhat indiscriminately regardless of copyright status, which led to a number of lawsuits against Google. By the end of 2008, Google had reportedly digitized over seven million books, of which only about one million were works in the public domain. Of the rest, one million were in copyright and in print, and five million were in copyright but out of print. In 2005, a group of authors and publishers brought a major class-action lawsuit against Google for infringement on the copyrighted works. Google argued that it was preserving "orphaned works" – books still under copyright, but whose copyright holders could not be located.[116]

The Authors Guild and Association of American Publishers separately sued Google in 2005 for its book project, citing "massive copyright infringement."[117] Google countered that its project represented a fair use and is the digital age equivalent of a card catalog with every word in the publication indexed.[9] The lawsuits were consolidated, and eventually a settlement was proposed. The settlement received significant criticism on a wide variety of grounds, including antitrust, privacy, and inadequacy of the proposed classes of authors and publishers. The settlement was eventually rejected,[118] and the publishers settled with Google soon after. The Authors Guild continued its case, and in 2011 their proposed class was certified. Google appealed that decision, with a number of amici asserting the inadequacy of the class, and the Second Circuit rejected the class certification in July 2013, remanding the case to the District Court for consideration of Google's fair use defense.[119]

In 2015 Authors Guild filed another appeal against Google to be considered by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York. Google won the case unanimously based on the argument that they were not showing people the full texts but instead snippets, and they are not allowing people to illegally read the book.[120] In a report, courts stated that they did not infringe on copyright laws, as they were protected under the fair use clause.[121]

Authors Guild tried again in 2016 to appeal the decision and this time took their case to be considered by the Supreme Court. The case was rejected, leaving the Second Circuit's decision on the case intact, meaning that Google did not violate copyright laws.[122] This case also set a precedent for other similar cases in regards to fair use laws, as it further clarified the law and expanded it. Such clarification affects other scanning projects similar to Google.[120]

Other lawsuits followed the Authors Guild's lead. In 2006 a German lawsuit, previously filed, was withdrawn.[123] In June 2006, Hervé de la Martinière,[124] a French publisher known as La Martinière and Éditions du Seuil,[125] announced its intention to sue Google France.[126] In 2009, the Paris Civil Court awarded 300,000 EUR (approximately 430,000 USD) in damages and interest and ordered Google to pay 10,000 EUR a day until it removes the publisher's books from its database.[125][127] The court wrote, "Google violated author copyright laws by fully reproducing and making accessible" books that Seuil owns without its permission[125] and that Google "committed acts of breach of copyright, which are of harm to the publishers".[124] Google said it will appeal.[125] Syndicat National de l'Edition, which joined the lawsuit, said Google has scanned about 100,000 French works under copyright.[125]

In December 2009, Chinese author Mian Mian filed a civil lawsuit for $8,900 against Google for scanning her novel, Acid Lovers. This is the first such lawsuit to be filed against Google in China.[128] Also, in November that year, the China Written Works Copyright Society (CWWCS) accused Google of scanning 18,000 books by 570 Chinese writers without authorization. Google agreed on Nov 20 to provide a list of Chinese books it had scanned, but the company refused to admit having "infringed" copyright laws.[129][unreliable source?]

In March 2007, Thomas Rubin, associate general counsel for copyright, trademark, and trade secrets at Microsoft, accused Google of violating copyright law with their book search service. Rubin specifically criticized Google's policy of freely copying any work until notified by the copyright holder to stop.[130]

Google licensing of public domain works is also an area of concern due to using of digital watermarking techniques with the books. Some published works that are in the public domain, such as all works created by the U.S. Federal government, are still treated like other works under copyright, and therefore locked after 1922.[131]

Similar projects

  • Project Gutenberg is a volunteer effort to digitize and archive cultural works, to "encourage the creation and distribution of eBooks". It was founded in 1971 by Michael S. Hart and is the oldest digital library. As of October 3, 2015, Project Gutenberg reached 50,000 items in its collection.
  • Internet Archive is a non-profit which digitizes over 1000 books a day, as well as mirrors books from Google Books and other sources. As of May 2011, it hosted over 2.8 million public domain books, greater than the approximate 1 million public domain books at Google Books.[132] Open Library, a sister project of Internet Archive, lends 80,000 scanned and purchased commercial ebooks to the visitors of 150 libraries.[133]
  • HathiTrust maintains HathiTrust Digital Library since October 13, 2008,[134] which preserves and provides access to material scanned by Google, some of the Internet Archive books, and some scanned locally by partner institutions. As of May 2010, it includes about 6 million volumes, over 1 million of which are public domain (at least in the US).
  • ACLS Humanities E-Book, an online collection of over 5,400 books of high quality in the humanities and related social sciences, accessible through institutional subscription.
  • Microsoft funded the scanning of 300,000 books to create Live Search Books in late 2006. It ran until May 2008, when the project was abandoned[135] and the books were made freely available on the Internet Archive.[136]
  • The National Digital Library of India (NDLI) is a project under Ministry of Human Resource Development, India. The objective is to integrate several national and international digital libraries in one single web-portal. The NDLI provides free of cost access to many books in English and the Indian languages.
  • Europeana links to roughly 10 million digital objects as of 2010, including video, photos, paintings, audio, maps, manuscripts, printed books, and newspapers from the past 2,000 years of European history from over 1,000 archives in the European Union.[137][138]
  • Gallica from the French National Library links to about 4,000,000 digitized books, newspapers, manuscripts, maps and drawings, etc. Created in 1997, the digital library continues to expand at a rate of about 5000 new documents per month. Since the end of 2008, most of the new scanned documents are available in image and text formats. Most of these documents are written in French.
  • Wikisource
  • Runivers

See also

References

  1. ^ Love, Dylan. "An Inside Look At One Of Google's Most Controversial Projects". Business Insider. from the original on 21 October 2017. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b c "Where do these books come from?". Google Books Help. from the original on 24 December 2014. Retrieved 10 November 2014.
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Further reading

  • Hoffmann, Anna Lauren (2016). "Google Books, Libraries, and Self-Respect: Information Justice beyond Distributions". Library Quarterly. 86: 76–92. doi:10.1086/684141. S2CID 146482065.
  • Jeanneney, Jean-Noël (2008). Google and the Myth of Universal Knowledge: A View from Europe. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

External links

  • Official website  
    • About Google Books
  • Jones, Elisabeth (May 14, 2013). "New Google Books Library Project Timeline: Now With (more) Citations!".
  • Darnton, Robert (February 12, 2009). "Google & the Future of Books". New York Review of Books. Vol. 56, no. 2. from the original on January 25, 2009.
  • "Public Domain Archive and Reprints Service". Public Domain Reprints. An experimental project dedicated to reprinting public domain books
    Utilizing: Alibris, Amazon, Book Finder, Google, LibraryThing, and WorldCat
  • Somers, James (Apr 20, 2017). "Torching the Modern-Day Library of Alexandria". The Atlantic. Somewhere at Google there is a database containing 25 million books and nobody is allowed to read them
  • Toobin, Jeffrey (February 5, 2007). "Google's Moon Shot". The New Yorker. from the original on February 2, 2007.

google, books, google, print, redirects, here, confused, with, google, cloud, print, this, article, about, google, book, search, engine, google, book, service, google, play, books, children, book, google, book, previously, known, google, book, search, google, . Google Print redirects here Not to be confused with Google Cloud Print This article is about Google s book search engine For Google s e book service see Google Play Books For the children s book see The Google Book Google Books previously known as Google Book Search Google Print and by its code name Project Ocean 1 is a service from Google Inc that searches the full text of books and magazines that Google has scanned converted to text using optical character recognition OCR and stored in its digital database 2 Books are provided either by publishers and authors through the Google Books Partner Program or by Google s library partners through the Library Project 3 Additionally Google has partnered with a number of magazine publishers to digitize their archives 4 5 Google BooksScreenshotType of siteDigital libraryOwnerGoogleURLbooks wbr google wbr comLaunchedOctober 2004 18 years ago 2004 10 as Google Print Current statusActiveThe Publisher Program was first known as Google Print when it was introduced at the Frankfurt Book Fair in October 2004 The Google Books Library Project which scans works in the collections of library partners and adds them to the digital inventory was announced in December 2004 The Google Books initiative has been hailed for its potential to offer unprecedented access to what may become the largest online body of human knowledge 6 7 and promoting the democratization of knowledge 8 However it has also been criticized for potential copyright violations 8 9 and lack of editing to correct the many errors introduced into the scanned texts by the OCR process As of October 2019 update Google celebrated 15 years of Google Books and provided the number of scanned books as more than 40 million titles 10 Google estimated in 2010 that there were about 130 million distinct titles in the world 11 12 and stated that it intended to scan all of them 11 However the scanning process in American academic libraries has slowed since the aughts 13 14 Google Book s scanning efforts have been subject to litigation including Authors Guild v Google a class action lawsuit in the United States decided in Google s favor see below This was a major case that came close to changing copyright practices for orphan works in the United States 15 Contents 1 Details 2 Scanning of books 3 Website functionality 4 Ngram Viewer 5 Content issues and criticism 5 1 Scanning errors 5 2 Errors in metadata 5 3 Language issues 5 4 Google Books versus Google Scholar 6 Library partners 6 1 Initial partners 6 2 Additional partners 7 History 7 1 Status 8 Legal issues 9 Similar projects 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksDetails EditResults from Google Books show up in both the universal Google Search and in the dedicated Google Books search website books google com In response to search queries Google Books allows users to view full pages from books in which the search terms appear if the book is out of copyright or if the copyright owner has given permission If Google believes the book is still under copyright a user sees snippets of text around the queried search terms All instances of the search terms in the book text appear with a yellow highlight The four access levels used on Google Books are 16 Full view Books in the public domain are available for full view and can be downloaded for free In print books acquired through the Partner Program are also available for full view if the publisher has given permission although this is rare Preview For in print books where permission has been granted the number of viewable pages is limited to a preview set by a variety of access restrictions and security measures some based on user tracking Usually the publisher can set the percentage of the book available for preview 17 Users are restricted from copying downloading or printing book previews A watermark reading Copyrighted material appears at the bottom of pages All books acquired through the Partner Program are available for preview Snippet view A snippet view two to three lines of text surrounding the queried search term is displayed in cases where Google does not have permission of the copyright owner to display a preview This could be because Google cannot identify the owner or the owner declined permission If a search term appears many times in a book Google displays no more than three snippets thus preventing the user from viewing too much of the book Also Google does not display any snippets for certain reference books such as dictionaries where the display of even snippets can harm the market for the work Google maintains that no permission is required under copyright law to display the snippet view 18 No preview Google also displays search results for books that have not been digitized As these books have not been scanned their text is not searchable and only the metadata such as the title author publisher number of pages ISBN subject and copyright information and in some cases a table of contents and book summary is available In effect this is similar to an online library card catalog 3 In response to criticism from groups such as the American Association of Publishers and the Authors Guild Google announced an opt out policy in August 2005 through which copyright owners could provide a list of titles that they do not want scanned and the request would be respected The company also stated that it would not scan any in copyright books between August and 1 November 2005 to provide the owners with the opportunity to decide which books to exclude from the Project Thus copyright owners have three choices with respect to any work 18 It can participate in the Partner Program to make a book available for preview or full view in which case it would share revenue derived from the display of pages from the work in response to user queries It can let Google scan the book under the Library Project and display snippets in response to user queries It can opt out of the Library Project in which case Google will not scan the book If the book has already been scanned Google will reset its access level as No preview Most scanned works are no longer in print or commercially available 19 In addition to procuring books from libraries Google also obtains books from its publisher partners through the Partner Program designed to help publishers and authors promote their books Publishers and authors submit either a digital copy of their book in EPUB or PDF format or a print copy to Google which is made available on Google Books for preview The publisher can control the percentage of the book available for preview with the minimum being 20 They can also choose to make the book fully viewable and even allow users to download a PDF copy Books can also be made available for sale on Google Play 3 Unlike the Library Project this does not raise any copyright concerns as it is conducted pursuant to an agreement with the publisher The publisher can choose to withdraw from the agreement at any time 18 For many books Google Books displays the original page numbers However Tim Parks writing in The New York Review of Books in 2014 noted that Google had stopped providing page numbers for many recent publications likely the ones acquired through the Partner Program presumably in alliance with the publishers in order to force those of us who need to prepare footnotes to buy paper editions 20 Scanning of books EditThe project began in 2002 under the codename Project Ocean Google co founder Larry Page had always had an interest in digitizing books When he and Marissa Mayer began experimenting with book scanning in 2002 it took 40 minutes for them to digitize a 300 page book But soon after the technology had been developed to the extent that scanning operators could scan up to 6000 pages an hour 15 Google established designated scanning centers to which books were transported by trucks The stations could digitize at the rate of 1 000 pages per hour The books were placed in a custom built mechanical cradle that adjusted the book spine in place while an array of lights and optical instruments scanned the two open pages Each page would have two cameras directed at it capturing the image while a range finder LIDAR overlaid a three dimensional laser grid on the book s surface to capture the curvature of the paper A human operator would turn the pages by hand using a foot pedal to take the photographs With no need to flatten the pages or align them perfectly Google s system not only reached a remarkable efficiency and speed but also helped protect the fragile collections from being over handled Afterwards the crude images went through three levels of processing first de warping algorithms used the LIDAR data fix the pages curvature Then optical character recognition OCR software transformed the raw images into text and lastly another round of algorithms extracted page numbers footnotes illustrations and diagrams 15 Many of the books are scanned using a customized Elphel 323 camera 21 22 at a rate of 1 000 pages per hour 23 A patent awarded to Google in 2009 revealed that Google had come up with an innovative system for scanning books that uses two cameras and infrared light to automatically correct for the curvature of pages in a book By constructing a 3D model of each page and then de warping it Google is able to present flat looking pages without having to really make the pages flat which requires the use of destructive methods such as unbinding or glass plates to individually flatten each page which is inefficient for large scale scanning 24 25 Google decided to omit color information in favour of better spatial resolution as most out of copyright books at the time did not contain colors Each page image was passed through algorithms that distinguished the text and illustration regions Text regions were then processed via OCR to enable full text searching Google expended considerable resources in coming up with optimal compression techniques aiming for high image quality while keeping the file sizes minimal to enable access by internet users with low bandwidth 26 Website functionality EditFor each work Google Books automatically generates an overview page This page displays information extracted from the book its publishing details a high frequency word map the table of contents as well as secondary material such as summaries reader reviews not readable in the mobile version of the website and links to other relevant texts A visitor to the page for instance might see a list of books that share a similar genre and theme or they might see a list of current scholarship on the book This content moreover offers interactive possibilities for users signed into their Google account They can export the bibliographic data and citations in standard formats write their own reviews add it to their library to be tagged organized and shared with other people 27 28 Thus Google Books collects these more interpretive elements from a range of sources including the users third party sites like Goodreads and often the book s author and publisher 29 In fact to encourage authors to upload their own books Google has added several functionalities to the website The authors can allow visitors to download their ebook for free or they can set their own purchase price They can change the price back and forth offering discounts whenever it suits them Also if a book s author chooses to add an ISBN LCCN or OCLC record number the service will update the book s url to include it Then the author can set a specific page as the link s anchor This option makes their book more easily discoverable Ngram Viewer EditMain article Google Ngram Viewer The Ngram Viewer is a service connected to Google Books that graphs the frequency of word usage across their book collection The service is important for historians and linguists as it can provide an inside look into human culture through word use throughout time periods 30 This program has fallen under criticism because of errors in the metadata used in the program 31 Content issues and criticism EditThe project has received criticism that its stated aim of preserving orphaned and out of print works is at risk due to scanned data having errors and such problems not being solved 32 33 Users can report errors in Google scanned books at support google com books partner troubleshooter 2983879 Scanning errors Edit A hand scanned in a Google book The scanning process is subject to errors For example some pages may be unreadable upside down or in the wrong order Scholars have even reported crumpled pages obscuring thumbs and fingers and smeared or blurry images 34 On this issue a declaration from Google at the end of scanned books says The digitization at the most basic level is based on page images of the physical books To make this book available as an ePub formatted file we have taken those page images and extracted the text using Optical Character Recognition or OCR for short technology The extraction of text from page images is a difficult engineering task Smudges on the physical books pages fancy fonts old fonts torn pages etc can all lead to errors in the extracted text Imperfect OCR is only the first challenge in the ultimate goal of moving from collections of page images to extracted text based books Our computer algorithms also have to automatically determine the structure of the book what are the headers and footers where images are placed whether text is verse or prose and so forth Getting this right allows us to render the book in a way that follows the format of the original book Despite our best efforts you may see spelling mistakes garbage characters extraneous images or missing pages in this book Based on our estimates these errors should not prevent you from enjoying the content of the book The technical challenges of automatically constructing a perfect book are daunting but we continue to make enhancements to our OCR and book structure extraction technologies 35 As of 2009 Google stated that they would start using reCAPTCHA to help fix the errors found in Google Book scans This method would only improve scanned words that are hard to recognize because of the scanning process and cannot solve errors such as turned pages or blocked words 36 Scanning errors have inspired works of art such as published collections of anomalous pages and a Tumblr blog 37 Errors in metadata Edit Scholars have frequently reported rampant errors in the metadata information on Google Books including misattributed authors and erroneous dates of publication Geoffrey Nunberg a linguist researching on the changes in word usage over time noticed that a search for books published before 1950 and containing the word internet turned up an unlikely 527 results Woody Allen is mentioned in 325 books ostensibly published before he was born Google responded to Nunberg by blaming the bulk of errors on the outside contractors 31 Other metadata errors reported include publication dates before the author s birth e g 182 works by Charles Dickens prior to his birth in 1812 incorrect subject classifications an edition of Moby Dick found under computers a biography of Mae West classified under religion conflicting classifications 10 editions of Whitman s Leaves of Grass all classified as both fiction and nonfiction incorrectly spelled titles authors and publishers Moby Dick or the White Wall and metadata for one book incorrectly appended to a completely different book the metadata for an 1818 mathematical work leads to a 1963 romance novel 38 39 A review of the author title publisher and publication year metadata elements for 400 randomly selected Google Books records was undertaken The results show 36 of sampled books in the digitization project contained metadata errors This error rate is higher than one would expect to find in a typical library online catalog 40 The overall error rate of 36 75 found in this study suggests that Google Books metadata has a high rate of error While major and minor errors are a subjective distinction based on the somewhat indeterminate concept of findability the errors found in the four metadata elements examined in this study should all be considered major 40 Metadata errors based on incorrect scanned dates makes research using the Google Books Project database difficult Google has shown only limited interest in cleaning up these errors 41 Language issues Edit Some European politicians and intellectuals have criticized Google s effort on linguistic imperialism grounds They argue that because the vast majority of books proposed to be scanned are in English it will result in disproportionate representation of natural languages in the digital world German Russian French and Spanish for instance are popular languages in scholarship The disproportionate online emphasis on English however could shape access to historical scholarship and ultimately the growth and direction of future scholarship Among these critics is Jean Noel Jeanneney the former president of the Bibliotheque nationale de France 42 43 Google Books versus Google Scholar Edit While Google Books has digitized large numbers of journal back issues its scans do not include the metadata required for identifying specific articles in specific issues This has led the makers of Google Scholar to start their own program to digitize and host older journal articles in agreement with their publishers 44 Library partners EditThe Google Books Library Project is aimed at scanning and making searchable the collections of several major research libraries 45 Along with bibliographic information snippets of text from a book are often viewable If a book is out of copyright and in the public domain the book is fully available to read or download 16 In copyright books scanned through the Library Project are made available on Google Books for snippet view Regarding the quality of scans Google acknowledges that they are not always of sufficiently high quality to be offered for sale on Google Play Also because of supposed technical constraints Google does not replace scans with higher quality versions that may be provided by the publishers 46 The project is the subject of the Authors Guild v Google lawsuit filed in 2005 and ruled in favor of Google in 2013 and again on appeal in 2015 Copyright owners can claim the rights for a scanned book and make it available for preview or full view by transferring it to their Partner Program account or request Google to prevent the book text from being searched 46 The number of institutions participating in the Library Project has grown since its inception 47 Initial partners Edit Notice about the project at Michigan University Library Harvard University Harvard University Library 48 The Harvard University Library and Google conducted a pilot throughout 2005 The project continued with the aim of increasing online access to the holdings of the Harvard University Library which includes more than 15 8 million volumes While physical access to Harvard s library materials is generally restricted to current Harvard students faculty and researchers or to scholars who can come to Cambridge the Harvard Google Project has been designed to enable both members of the Harvard community and users everywhere to discover works in the Harvard collection University of Michigan University of Michigan Library 49 As of March 2012 5 5 million volumes were scanned 50 New York Public Library 51 In this pilot program NYPL is working with Google to offer a collection of its public domain books which will be scanned in their entirety and made available for free to the public online Users will be able to search and browse the full text of these works When the scanning process is complete the books may be accessed from both The New York Public Library s website and from the Google search engine 51 University of Oxford Bodleian Library 52 Stanford University Stanford University Libraries SULAIR 53 Additional partners Edit Other institutional partners have joined the project since the partnership was first announced 54 Austrian National Library 55 Bavarian State Library 56 Bibliotheque municipale de Lyon 57 Big Ten Academic Alliance 58 Columbia University Columbia University Library System 59 Complutense University of Madrid 56 60 Cornell University Cornell University Library 61 Ghent University Ghent University Library Boekentoren 56 62 Keio University Keio Media Centers Libraries 63 National Library of Catalonia Biblioteca de Catalunya 64 Princeton University Princeton University Library 65 University of California California Digital Library 66 University of Lausanne Cantonal and University Library of Lausanne 56 67 University of Mysore Mysore University Library The partnership was for digitizing 800 000 texts including manuscripts written in palm leaves dating back to 8th century 68 69 University of Texas at Austin University of Texas Libraries 70 The partnership was for digitizing the library s Latin American collection about half a million volumes 50 University of Virginia University of Virginia Library 71 University of Wisconsin Madison University of Wisconsin Libraries 72 As of March 2012 about 600 000 volumes had been scanned 50 History Edit2002 A group of team members at Google officially launch the secret books project 73 Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page came up with the idea that later became Google Books while still graduate students at Stanford in 1996 The history page on the Google Books website describes their initial vision for this project in a future world in which vast collections of books are digitized people would use a web crawler to index the books content and analyze the connections between them determining any given book s relevance and usefulness by tracking the number and quality of citations from other books 73 This team visited the sites of some of the larger digitization efforts at that time including the Library of Congress s American Memory Project Project Gutenberg and the Universal Library to find out how they work as well as the University of Michigan Page s alma mater and the base for such digitization projects as JSTOR and Making of America In a conversation with the at that time University President Mary Sue Coleman when Page found out that the university s current estimate for scanning all the library s volumes was 1 000 years Page reportedly told Coleman that he believes Google can help make it happen in six 73 2003 The team works to develop a high speed scanning process as well as software for resolving issues in odd type sizes unusual fonts and other unexpected peculiarities 73 December 2004 Google signaled an extension to its Google Print initiative known as the Google Print Library Project 47 Google announced partnerships with several high profile university and public libraries including the University of Michigan Harvard Harvard University Library Stanford Green Library Oxford Bodleian Library and the New York Public Library According to press releases and university librarians Google planned to digitize and make available through its Google Books service approximately 15 million volumes within a decade The announcement soon triggered controversy as publisher and author associations challenged Google s plans to digitize not just books in the public domain but also titles still under copyright September October 2005 Two lawsuits against Google charge that the company has not respected copyrights and has failed to properly compensate authors and publishers One is a class action suit on behalf of authors Authors Guild v Google September 20 2005 and the other is a civil lawsuit brought by five large publishers and the Association of American Publishers McGraw Hill v Google October 19 2005 9 74 75 76 77 78 November 2005 Google changed the name of this service from Google Print to Google Book Search 79 Its program enabling publishers and authors to include their books in the service was renamed Google Books Partner Program 80 and the partnership with libraries became Google Books Library Project 2006 Google added a download a pdf button to all its out of copyright public domain books It also added a new browsing interface along with new About this Book pages 73 August 2006 The University of California System announced that it would join the Books digitization project This includes a portion of the 34 million volumes within the approximately 100 libraries managed by the System 81 September 2006 The Complutense University of Madrid became the first Spanish language library to join the Google Books Library Project 82 October 2006 The University of Wisconsin Madison announced that it would join the Book Search digitization project along with the Wisconsin Historical Society Library Combined the libraries have 7 2 million holdings 83 November 2006 The University of Virginia joined the project Its libraries contain more than five million volumes and more than 17 million manuscripts rare books and archives 84 January 2007 The University of Texas at Austin announced that it would join the Book Search digitization project At least one million volumes would be digitized from the university s 13 library locations March 2007 The Bavarian State Library announced a partnership with Google to scan more than a million public domain and out of print works in German as well as English French Italian Latin and Spanish 85 May 2007 A book digitizing project partnership was announced jointly by Google and the Cantonal and University Library of Lausanne 86 May 2007 The Boekentoren Library of Ghent University announced that it would participate with Google in digitizing and making digitized versions of 19th century books in the French and Dutch languages available online 87 May 2007 Mysore University announces Google will digitize over 800 000 books and manuscripts including around 100 000 manuscripts written in Sanskrit or Kannada on both paper and palm leaves 68 June 2007 The Committee on Institutional Cooperation rebranded as the Big Ten Academic Alliance in 2016 announced that its twelve member libraries would participate in scanning 10 million books over the course of the next six years 58 July 2007 Keio University became Google s first library partner in Japan with the announcement that they would digitize at least 120 000 public domain books 88 August 2007 Google announced that it would digitize up to 500 000 both copyrighted and public domain items from Cornell University Library Google would also provide a digital copy of all works scanned to be incorporated into the university s own library system 89 September 2007 Google added a feature that allows users to share snippets of books that are in the public domain The snippets may appear exactly as they do in the scan of the book or as plain text 90 September 2007 Google debuted a new feature called My Library which allows users to create personal customized libraries selections of books that they can label review rate or full text search 91 December 2007 Columbia University was added as a partner in digitizing public domain works 92 May 2008 Microsoft tapered off and planned to end its scanning project which had reached 750 000 books and 80 million journal articles 93 October 2008 A settlement was reached between the publishing industry and Google after two years of negotiation Google agreed to compensate authors and publishers in exchange for the right to make millions of books available to the public 9 94 October 2008 The HathiTrust Shared Digital Repository later known as the HathiTrust Digital Library is launched jointly by the Committee on Institutional Cooperation and the 11 university libraries in the University of California system all of which were Google partner libraries in order to archive and provide academic access to books from their collections scanned by Google and others 95 November 2008 Google reached the 7 million book mark for items scanned by Google and by their publishing partners 1 million were in full preview mode and 1 million were fully viewable and downloadable public domain works About five million were out of print 19 96 97 December 2008 Google announced the inclusion of magazines in Google Books Titles include New York Magazine Ebony and Popular Mechanics 98 99 February 2009 Google launched a mobile version of Google Book Search allowing iPhone and Android phone users to read over 1 5 million public domain works in the US and over 500 000 outside the US using a mobile browser Instead of page images the plain text of the book is displayed 100 May 2009 At the annual BookExpo convention in New York Google signaled its intent to introduce a program that would enable publishers to sell digital versions of their newest books direct to consumers through Google 101 December 2009 A French court shut down the scanning of copyrighted books published in France saying this violated copyright laws It was the first major legal loss for the scanning project 102 April 2010 Visual artists were not included in the previous lawsuit and settlement are the plaintiff groups in another lawsuit and say they intend to bring more than just Google Books under scrutiny The new class action read the statement goes beyond Google s Library Project and includes Google s other systematic and pervasive infringements of the rights of photographers illustrators and other visual artists 103 May 2010 It was reported that Google would launch a digital book store called Google Editions 104 It would compete with Amazon Barnes amp Noble Apple and other electronic book retailers with its own e book store Unlike others Google Editions would be completely online and would not require a specific device such as kindle Nook or iPad June 2010 Google passed 12 million books scanned 11 August 2010 It was announced that Google intends to scan all known existing 129 864 880 books within a decade amounting to over 4 billion digital pages and 2 trillion words in total 11 December 2010 Google eBooks Google Editions was launched in the US 105 December 2010 Google launched the Ngram Viewer which collects and graphs data on word usage across its book collection 30 March 2011 A federal judge rejected the settlement reached between the publishing industry and Google 106 March 2012 Google passed 20 million books scanned 107 108 March 2012 Google reached a settlement with publishers 109 January 2013 The documentary Google and the World Brain was shown at the Sundance Film Festival 110 November 2013 Ruling in Authors Guild v Google US District Judge Denny Chin sides with Google citing fair use 111 The authors said they would appeal 112 October 2015 The appeals court sided with Google declaring that Google did not violate copyright law 113 According to the New York Times Google has scanned more than 25 million books 13 April 2016 The US Supreme Court declined to hear the Authors Guild s appeal which means the lower court s decision stood and Google would be allowed to scan library books and display snippets in search results without violating the law 114 Status Edit Google has been quite secretive regarding its plans on the future of the Google Books project Scanning operations had been slowing down since at least 2012 as confirmed by the librarians at several of Google s partner institutions At University of Wisconsin the speed had reduced to less than half of what it was in 2006 However the librarians have said that the dwindling pace could be a natural result of maturation of the project initially stacks of books were entirely taken up for scanning whereas now only the titles that had not already been scanned needed to be considered 50 The company s own Google Books timeline page did not mention anything after 2007 even in 2017 and the Google Books blog was merged into the Google Search blog in 2012 115 Despite winning the decade long litigation in 2017 The Atlantic has said that Google has all but shut down its scanning operation 15 In April 2017 Wired reported that there were only a few Google employees working on the project and new books were still being scanned but at a significantly lower rate It commented that the decade long legal battle had caused Google to lose its ambition 115 Legal issues EditFurther information Authors Guild v Google Through the project library books were being digitized somewhat indiscriminately regardless of copyright status which led to a number of lawsuits against Google By the end of 2008 Google had reportedly digitized over seven million books of which only about one million were works in the public domain Of the rest one million were in copyright and in print and five million were in copyright but out of print In 2005 a group of authors and publishers brought a major class action lawsuit against Google for infringement on the copyrighted works Google argued that it was preserving orphaned works books still under copyright but whose copyright holders could not be located 116 The Authors Guild and Association of American Publishers separately sued Google in 2005 for its book project citing massive copyright infringement 117 Google countered that its project represented a fair use and is the digital age equivalent of a card catalog with every word in the publication indexed 9 The lawsuits were consolidated and eventually a settlement was proposed The settlement received significant criticism on a wide variety of grounds including antitrust privacy and inadequacy of the proposed classes of authors and publishers The settlement was eventually rejected 118 and the publishers settled with Google soon after The Authors Guild continued its case and in 2011 their proposed class was certified Google appealed that decision with a number of amici asserting the inadequacy of the class and the Second Circuit rejected the class certification in July 2013 remanding the case to the District Court for consideration of Google s fair use defense 119 In 2015 Authors Guild filed another appeal against Google to be considered by the 2nd U S Circuit Court of Appeals in New York Google won the case unanimously based on the argument that they were not showing people the full texts but instead snippets and they are not allowing people to illegally read the book 120 In a report courts stated that they did not infringe on copyright laws as they were protected under the fair use clause 121 Authors Guild tried again in 2016 to appeal the decision and this time took their case to be considered by the Supreme Court The case was rejected leaving the Second Circuit s decision on the case intact meaning that Google did not violate copyright laws 122 This case also set a precedent for other similar cases in regards to fair use laws as it further clarified the law and expanded it Such clarification affects other scanning projects similar to Google 120 Other lawsuits followed the Authors Guild s lead In 2006 a German lawsuit previously filed was withdrawn 123 In June 2006 Herve de la Martiniere 124 a French publisher known as La Martiniere and Editions du Seuil 125 announced its intention to sue Google France 126 In 2009 the Paris Civil Court awarded 300 000 EUR approximately 430 000 USD in damages and interest and ordered Google to pay 10 000 EUR a day until it removes the publisher s books from its database 125 127 The court wrote Google violated author copyright laws by fully reproducing and making accessible books that Seuil owns without its permission 125 and that Google committed acts of breach of copyright which are of harm to the publishers 124 Google said it will appeal 125 Syndicat National de l Edition which joined the lawsuit said Google has scanned about 100 000 French works under copyright 125 In December 2009 Chinese author Mian Mian filed a civil lawsuit for 8 900 against Google for scanning her novel Acid Lovers This is the first such lawsuit to be filed against Google in China 128 Also in November that year the China Written Works Copyright Society CWWCS accused Google of scanning 18 000 books by 570 Chinese writers without authorization Google agreed on Nov 20 to provide a list of Chinese books it had scanned but the company refused to admit having infringed copyright laws 129 unreliable source In March 2007 Thomas Rubin associate general counsel for copyright trademark and trade secrets at Microsoft accused Google of violating copyright law with their book search service Rubin specifically criticized Google s policy of freely copying any work until notified by the copyright holder to stop 130 Google licensing of public domain works is also an area of concern due to using of digital watermarking techniques with the books Some published works that are in the public domain such as all works created by the U S Federal government are still treated like other works under copyright and therefore locked after 1922 131 Similar projects EditProject Gutenberg is a volunteer effort to digitize and archive cultural works to encourage the creation and distribution of eBooks It was founded in 1971 by Michael S Hart and is the oldest digital library As of October 3 2015 update Project Gutenberg reached 50 000 items in its collection Internet Archive is a non profit which digitizes over 1000 books a day as well as mirrors books from Google Books and other sources As of May 2011 update it hosted over 2 8 million public domain books greater than the approximate 1 million public domain books at Google Books 132 Open Library a sister project of Internet Archive lends 80 000 scanned and purchased commercial ebooks to the visitors of 150 libraries 133 HathiTrust maintains HathiTrust Digital Library since October 13 2008 134 which preserves and provides access to material scanned by Google some of the Internet Archive books and some scanned locally by partner institutions As of May 2010 update it includes about 6 million volumes over 1 million of which are public domain at least in the US ACLS Humanities E Book an online collection of over 5 400 books of high quality in the humanities and related social sciences accessible through institutional subscription Microsoft funded the scanning of 300 000 books to create Live Search Books in late 2006 It ran until May 2008 when the project was abandoned 135 and the books were made freely available on the Internet Archive 136 The National Digital Library of India NDLI is a project under Ministry of Human Resource Development India The objective is to integrate several national and international digital libraries in one single web portal The NDLI provides free of cost access to many books in English and the Indian languages Europeana links to roughly 10 million digital objects as of 2010 update including video photos paintings audio maps manuscripts printed books and newspapers from the past 2 000 years of European history from over 1 000 archives in the European Union 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March 20 2012 Thomas Claburn March 6 2007 Microsoft Attorney Accuses Google Of Copyright Violations InformationWeek Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved March 6 2007 Robert B Townsend Google Books Is It Good for History Archived 2013 05 25 at the Wayback Machine Perspectives September 2007 The number of Public Domain books at Google Books can be calculated by looking at the number of Public Domain books at HathiTrust which is the academic mirror of Google Books As of May 2010 HathiTrust had over 1 million Public Domain books Internet Archive and Library Partners Develop Joint Collection of 80 000 eBooks To Extend Traditional In Library Lending Model San Francisco February 22 2011 Retrieved 2011 05 26 During a library visit patrons with an OpenLibrary org account can borrow any of these lendable eBooks using laptops reading devices or library computers languagehat com TRUST HATHI NOT GOOGLE Archived from the original on 2009 06 03 Retrieved 2010 01 10 Microsoft starts online library in challenge to Google Books AFP Melbourne 2006 12 08 Archived from the original on 2018 06 18 Retrieved 2008 11 24 Microsoft launched an online library in a move that pits the world s biggest software company against Google s controversial project to digitize the world s books Xio Christina Google Books An Other Popular Service By Google Archived from the original on 4 April 2013 Retrieved 4 August 2012 Few years back the Microsoft abandoned the project and now all the books are freely available at the Internet archive http version1 europeana eu permanent dead link Snyder Chris November 20 2008 Europe s Answer to Google Book Search Crashes on Day 1 Wired Archived from the original on 2009 04 16 Retrieved 2008 11 24 Further reading EditHoffmann Anna Lauren 2016 Google Books Libraries and Self Respect Information Justice beyond Distributions Library Quarterly 86 76 92 doi 10 1086 684141 S2CID 146482065 Jeanneney Jean Noel 2008 Google and the Myth of Universal Knowledge A View from Europe Chicago IL University of Chicago Press External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Google Books Official website About Google Books Jones Elisabeth May 14 2013 New Google Books Library Project Timeline Now With more Citations Darnton Robert February 12 2009 Google amp the Future of Books New York Review of Books Vol 56 no 2 Archived from the original on January 25 2009 Public Domain Archive and Reprints Service Public Domain Reprints An experimental project dedicated to reprinting public domain booksUtilizing Alibris Amazon Book Finder Google LibraryThing and WorldCat Somers James Apr 20 2017 Torching the Modern Day Library of Alexandria The Atlantic Somewhere at Google there is a database containing 25 million books and nobody is allowed to read them Toobin Jeffrey February 5 2007 Google s Moon Shot The New Yorker Archived from the original on February 2 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Google Books amp oldid 1140176786, 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