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Darnton on the Google settlement
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Darnton on the Google settlement
- From: "James J. O'Donnell" <jod@georgetown.edu>
- Date: Fri, 23 Jan 2009 08:55:23 EST
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Harvard professor and University librarian Robert Darnton has a long piece on the Google settlement in the next issue of the New York Review of Books: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/22281 Close readers of earlier pieces by him will have predicted his judgment accurately: "Looking back over the course of digitization from the 1990s, we now can see that we missed a great opportunity. Action by Congress and the Library of Congress or a grand alliance of research libraries supported by a coalition of foundations could have done the job at a feasible cost and designed it in a manner that would have put the public interest first." The "could" has to be parsed carefully there. I had some reason to know the state of play around LC on these issues a decade ago, and the prospects for public funding in support of such a project were slim, to say the least. I need to reread the piece, but it does seem to omit any expression of gratitude towards Google for having stepped in where the public sector did not act or for having fought through the tangles of copyright to get to the settlement. Jim O'Donnell Georgetown U.
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