Germany Challenges Google Book Settlement

Germany has joined the growing chorus of people, groups, and even nations that are against the proposed settlement of a lawsuit over Google’s scanning of copyrighted books and making them available online. The Wall Street Journal reports that the German government filed its opposition on Monday. The full filing appears to be available on Justia.com. […]

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Germany has joined the growing chorus of people, groups, and even nations that are against the proposed settlement of a lawsuit over Google’s scanning of copyrighted books and making them available online.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the German government filed its opposition on Monday. The full filing appears to be available on Justia.com.

In its filing, Germany says the proposed settlement will give Google “an unfair advantage over all other digital libraries (commercial and non-commercial) in the United States and Germany” and “will flout German laws that have been established to protect German authors and publishers” where digital copying and publishing is concerned.

A sticking point appears to be the availability of the scanned books in Germany. Germany says it will be easy for German searchers to use Google Book Search. In a statement to the Wall Street Journal, Google claims that “only U.S. readers will benefit” from the settlement.

The German filing also points out that the settlement allows Google to scan books by German authors, even though most German authors are not represented in the ongoing court case. The Authors Guild, plaintiffs in the original lawsuit, limits membership to authors who have been published by a U.S. publisher.


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About the author

Matt McGee
Contributor
Matt McGee joined Third Door Media as a writer/reporter/editor in September 2008. He served as Editor-In-Chief from January 2013 until his departure in July 2017. He can be found on Twitter at @MattMcGee.

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