Google and Fair Use

| 0 Comments

News.com's Declan McCullogh looks at the copyright suits where Google is a defendant: Copyright tussles for Google: "As Google becomes more deeply interested in books and video, and expands its search domain beyond Web pages, it has found itself increasingly at odds with established copyright industries including book publishers, journalists, and professional photographers."

Frank Pasquale, Madisonian: Would Google Go Out of Business Without Fair Use?: "I've also thought that the worst outcome in these cases would be Google's decision to use its massive cash reserves to settle all the cases. For that would help set a precedent that might seal its (and perhaps a few other high-market-capped search engines) dominance over the field. Who else would have the cash reserves to compete in the search engine market, given the huge barriers to entry created by licensing fees?"

William McGeveran, Info/Law: Google, Fair Use, and Settlement: "So, not only would settlements lock in Google as the super-dominant player as Pasquale says (and as many techies have begun to fear anyway), it also would short-circuit the movement of the law to a reasonable accommodation of search technology. To be sure, that movement is slow, indirect, and sometimes fumbling, but it is happening."

McGeveran goes on to discuss the analogy of academic fair uses settlements between publishers and universities. The end result being that the actual practices of fair use are constrained to a much smaller set of actions that the law proscribes.

Previously: Thoughts on Fair Use

Leave a comment

About

A work in progress

Recent Entries

The best fan video in the world?
Via Top Gear's blog, I found this link to a fan-made Top Gear style search for the beat driving road…
Shatner, Montalban, iPod and Kindle
Dvice tests out the range of expression in the text-to-speech systems in the Kindle 2 and iPod Shuffle by having…
A F#*&ing brilliant Supreme Court ruling?
The Supreme Court released its ruling in FCC v. Fox Television Stations, et al. (07-582), in which a 5-4 majority…