Book2Book - 1 June, 2012
The battle is officially on. On May 31, Judge Denny Chin rejected Google's motion to dismiss the Authors Guild as an associational plaintiff, and granted the Guild's motion for class certification, meaning that Google's library scanning program, barring another settlement, is headed to trial on the merits.PW
and more
Paid Content: Harry Potter’s publishing wand can tame Amazon, pirates
And from PublishersLunch:
Unsurprisingly, Judge Denny Chin agreed
with his own ruling from 2005 and once again agreed to certification of the
class of authors in the refiled Google Books infringement case--thus sentencing
himself to potentially years more of administering this case. He also approved
associational plaintiff status for both the Authors Guild and the American
Society of Media Photographers.
One shouldn't read much into the ruling
other than that the case will go forward all over again. In part, Chin used
Google's own actions against them: "Given the sweeping and
undiscriminating nature of Google's unauthorized copying, it would be
unjust torequire that each affected association member litigate his
claim individually. When Google copied works, it did not conduct
an inquiry into the copyright ownership of each work; nor did
it conduct an individualized evaluation as to whether posting 'snippets'
of a particular work would constitute 'fair use.' It copied and made
search results available en masse. Google cannot now turn the tables and
ask the Court to require each copyright holder to come forward
individually and assert rights in a separate action. Because Google
treated the copyright holders as a group, the copyright holders should be
able to litigate on a group basis."
Ruling
Ruling
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