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The Google Books Settlement: A Private Contract in the Absence of Adequate Copyright Law
2011
Scholarly and Research Communication
Internet search giant Google Inc. began digitizing library collections in 2004, confident that scanning and indexing books to display excerpts based on users' search queries were fair uses under U.S. copyright law. Authors and publishers disagreed, and in 2005 representatives filed class action copyright infringement complaints. Rather than litigate, the parties negotiated a settlement that would not only allow Google's original uses but license Google to use, and sell online, millions of books
doi:10.22230/src.2011v2n1a29
fatcat:3dydkgayorawpfvknl3sinpjge