Just this past Monday, April 18, the Supreme
Court decided not to take up the case of a long-running lawsuit against Google
Books. The court's decision is a win for Google, bringing an end to a
decade-long court battle. The Google
Books project makes digital scans of millions of books available to the
world. In order to build such an impressive and (of course!) searchable
digital library, Google partnered with
major libraries, including those of the University of Michigan, Columbia
University, and Harvard University, to scan their entire book
collections.
Back in 2005, the Authors’ Guild sued Google over its Google Books project. The Authors’ Guild claimed that Google
infringed on copyright by its wholescale scanning of complete books, done
without the permission of authors or publishers. The lawsuit has taken many twists and turns
over the past decade but, again and again, the courts found in favor of Google,
declaring Google Books to be both a “fair use” of the texts in question, as
well as a transformative use. Google’s
book-scanning endeavor is seen as transformative because, for the first time
ever, it allows for the full-text searching and text-mining of millions of
works. Now that the Supreme Court has
declined the Google Books case, Google Books fans can rest easy, knowing that the
fate of this revolutionary project no longer stands at the mercy of a judge.
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