PublishersLunch
Google Books has achieved in France what
the company has been unable to do in the US: They have settled the remaining
lawsuits over their book scanning with the French Publishers Association
(Syndicat national de l'édition) and the French Author's Association (Société
des gens de lettres) and instituted a commercial arrangement for selling access
to out-of-print books that Google has scanned. Strategic Partner Development
Manager of Google Books France Philippe Colombet says the new
"partnerships...will put France ahead of the rest of the world in bringing
long lost out-of-print works back to life. From now, publishers will promote
and commercialize electronic versions of their out-of-print books scanned by
Google. In this win-win solution, publishers and authors retain control over
the commercial use of their books – while at the same time, opening a practical
path to bring to a wide audience our decade-long efforts to digitize
books."
Colombet tells Bloomberg
that the plan includes selling ebook versions of those out-of-print works, with
the "majority of the revenue" going to the publisher. In a media
conference call, he expressed the belief (or is it a hope) "that as the
ebook market matures" attention will move from bestsellers and new
releases to reaping revenue from older works (even though that's not what has
happened so far in the US). If the settlement mimics agreements reached
previously with Hachette Livre and La Martiniere Group, the publishers and/or
authors will retain control over which works can be scanned or sold.
Colombet adds on the Google blog that
"we remain hopeful to reach a solution in the US allowing us to make the
world's books searchable and discoverable online." Google will also
support an initiative from the author's association "to build a
comprehensive database of published writers, a process that will help identify
copyright holders and help them receive payment for their works." Google
says this effort is separate from a recent French law establishing a system of
collective rights management for out-of-print books.
Google blog
Google blog
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