Report: Google considering book-settlement tweaks

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Google is in talks with the US Department of Justice and the plaintiffs in its book-search settlement over possible modifications to the deal that could assuage the concerns of the Justice Department, according to a report.

Bloomberg reported late on Wednesday that Google, a group of plaintiffs that sued it in 2005, and the Justice Department are in talks over the settlement, which gives Google the legal standing to digitise out-of-print books that are still protected by copyright law.

Google was sued by numerous groups including the Authors Guild and several publishers after it began scanning that type of book, and came away with the right to present those books in Google Book Search following an October 2008 settlement.

But that settlement has provoked strident dissent from several authors, libraries and privacy advocates concerned about Google's unique licence to those out-of-print books.

Google has promised to act responsibility, and notes that any other company can negotiate scanning deals with the Books Rights Registry set up as part of the settlement, but the deal as structured is apparently not enough to satisfy the Justice Department, according to the report, which does not specify which provisions of the agreement are subject to change.

A Google representative declined to comment on any possible negotiations with the plaintiffs and the Justice Department, but said of the settlement: "If approved by the court, this settlement stands to unlock access to millions of books in the US while giving authors and publishers new ways to distribute their work."

One possibility is that the Justice Department is concerned about the Books Rights Registry, which, under the settlement, has the power to negotiate deals with other companies, distribute payments to books rights holders, and represent the interest of authors and publishers.

The registry has been criticised as a "cartel" by Google's detractors, who believe that although it is a not-for-profit organisation run separately from Google, it will essentially function as a gatekeeper for other companies that wish to scan and distribute books.

Google chief executive Eric Schmidt expressed frustration with the critics of the settlement on Wednesday in an interview with Search Engine Land's Danny Sullivan, complaining that those criticising the settlement are not putting forward their own solutions to create what all parties to the settlement agree would be a tremendous asset: a comprehensive digital library.

"I'm open to a better solution," Schmidt told Search Engine Land. "You will recall, we had our solution, and we were sued over it. And we then had a-god-knows-how-many years of negotiations with 27 parties, and we've actually produced a deal," he said.

Google was ordered on Wednesday by Judge Denny Chin, who is overseeing the settlement, to respond by 2 October to the wave of comments he has received regarding the settlement.

Supporters and objectors had until last week to file comments with the judge, who will consider them before holding a final hearing on 7 October to decide whether to approve the settlement.

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