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RE: Darnton on the Google settlement



It's all about digital rights, David, which no one bothered to think about much before the 1990s and which most contracts did not specifically cover. And then there are the numerous mergers that some commercial companies went through, which can be a tangled web for some to untangle in search of accurate information about the status of rights ownership--not to mention literary agencies that have disappeared from the face of the earth and authors who are hard to locate. By comparison, Google's task in determining what is still potentially under copyright is very simple: just find out if it was first published from 1923 on. Mostly an inspection of the copyright page is sufficient to answer that question.

Sandy Thatcher
Penn State University Press


I find it amusing that Google is expected to determine the
copyright status of millions of titles before they can be
digitised, but it is apparently unreasonable to expect publishers
to determine the copyright status of the titles they publish
themselves!

David Prosser
SPARC