Merkel slams Google Books scanning

By | October 11, 2009, 7:45pm PDT

Summary: Reuters reports that German Chancellor Andrea Merkel took the occasion of the Frankfurt Book Fair to criticize Google’s book scanning operation and the the Google Books deal. The German government has a clear position: copyrights have to be protected in the Internet,” Merkel said, adding there are “considerable dangers” for copyright protection in the Internet. “That’s why [...]

Reuters reports that German Chancellor Andrea Merkel took the occasion of the Frankfurt Book Fair to criticize Google’s book scanning operation and the the Google Books deal.

The German government has a clear position: copyrights have to be protected in the Internet,” Merkel said, adding there are “considerable dangers” for copyright protection in the Internet.
“That’s why we reject the scanning in of books without any copyright protection — like Google is doing. The government places a lot of weight on this position on copyrights to protect writers in Germany.”

Germany filed an opposition brief in the Google Books settlement, complaining that approval would allow Google to “flout German laws that have been established to protect German authors and publishers, including with respect to digital copying, publishing and the dissemination of their works.”

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Richard Koman

http://government.zdnet.com/?page_id=3731

Biography

Richard Koman

Richard Koman is an attorney admitted to practice in California. As a technology writer since the mid-1980s, Richard Koman has documented the role of computing in the transformation of the graphic arts, the growth of the Web and the birth of the peer-to-peer phenomenon. He worked as a book and web editor for O'Reilly Media throughout the 1990s, editing several influential websites and numerous best-sellers. As a lawyer, as well as a tech writer, he brings a unique perspective to the blog's intersection of law, government and technology.
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RE: Merkel slams Google Books scanning
deowll 13th Oct 2009
Do they even do German books? If they do it would have to be a separate deal from what we have in the US of A.
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Affecting more than copyrights
Ak3la 12th Oct 2009
Apparently, the service has power above and beyond "flout[ing] German laws" and can even change the names of world leaders...
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Do they even do German books? If they do it would have to be a separate deal from what we have in the US of A.

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