33. [The deal is]“breathtaking in scope,
groundbreaking for publishers and
authors, and trailblazing for
intellectual property in general.” -
Richard Sarnoff, chairman of the AAP
38. “Where does this leave the role of the
publisher? Anyone can publish content
now and peer reviewing can take place
in an entirely different way.” -Phil
Bradley, blogger and library consultant
44. “We had a major disagreement with
Google about copyright law... We still do,
and probably always will.” But he said
that the parties had been “able to set
those issues aside” for what “may be
the biggest book deal in U.S. publishing
history.” -Paul Aiken, Author’s Guild
executive director
45. What Google Got
http://www.flickr.com/photos/manfrys/2226178289/
47. “Although it is only a US settlement I
think it is going to set a precedent or
standard worldwide. The business
model is going to become a paradigm
for everybody.” -Mark Cardin, VP of
Mylibrary provider Ingram Micro
49. “This is a service that libraries, because
of copyright restrictions, could not offer
on their own and goes well beyond what
would have been possible, even if
Google had prevailed in defending the
lawsuit.” -Paul Courant
51. Library Types
• Fully Participating: lets Google scan,
retains copies, follows security provisions
• Cooperating: lets Google scan, without
copies and associated security provisions
• Public Domain: Provides with Google
Public Domain works
• Other: Allows scanning without
participating in the settlement
53. Next Actions
• Soon: Registry to begin
• 6/11/09: Court approval
• Rightsholders will have 120 days to
opt out (and still, after that)
• Mid/late-2009: Final approval
expected
• 2010: Likely to go into effect
54. “IMHO, this is a good deal that could be
the basis for something really
fantastic.” -Lawrence Lessig