Google, publishers reach book-scanning settlement

The Association of American Publishers and Google have reached a settlement to end seven years of litigation over the company's book-scanning project.


The Association of American Publishers and Google have reached a settlement to end seven years of litigation over the company's book-scanning project.

The agreement settles a copyright infringement lawsuit filed against Google in October 2005 by five AAP members. The settlement does not need court approval, Google and the AAP said in a joint news release.

The agreement "acknowledges" the rights and interests of copyright holders, the two sides said. U.S. publishers can choose to make available or choose to remove their books and journals digitized by Google for its Library Project.

The settlement shows that "digital services can provide innovative means to discover content while still respecting the rights of copyright-holders," Tom Allen, president and CEO of AAP, said in a statement.

The settlement does not affect Google's current litigation with the Authors Guild.

The agreement gives publishers who do not remove their works from the Google project the right to receive a digital copy for their use. Beyond the settlement, U.S publishers can make individual agreements with Google related to their other scanned works, the press release said.

Further terms of the agreement are confidential.

The agreement will allow Google to focus on its "core mission and work to increase the number of books available to educate, excite and entertain our users," David Drummond, Google's chief legal officer, said in a statement.

The publisher plaintiffs in the lawsuit were McGraw-Hill, Pearson Education, Penguin Group, John Wiley & Sons and Simon & Schuster.

In the Authors Guild lawsuit against Google, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit granted a stay in the case in September while the court reviews a judge's decision to grant class-action status to the authors.
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