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CNET: Judge Dismisses Authors’ Case Against Google Books

14/11/2013 by Intellectual Property Watch 3 Comments

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CNET News reports: A federal judge has dismissed a copyright infringement lawsuit that an author group brought against Google, concluding that books are like Web pages when it comes to indexing them and displaying small excerpts in search results.

The Google Books project has indexed millions of books, digitizing them without copyright holders’ permission, and the Authors Guild sued over the fact. But U.S. Circuit Judge Denny Chin in New York rejected that argument, granting on Thursday Google’s motion for summary judgment.

The full CNET story is here.

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Creative Commons License"CNET: Judge Dismisses Authors’ Case Against Google Books" by Intellectual Property Watch is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Filed Under: IP-Watch Briefs, IP Policies, Language, Themes, Venues, Access to Knowledge/ Education, Copyright Policy, English, IP Law, North America

Trackbacks

  1. Read More > – Intellectual Property Watch ‹ Squawk Trader says:
    14/11/2013 at 9:25 pm

    […] Read More >Intellectual Property Watch… fears program cuts because of a persistent funding crisis. Revenues from a Financial Transaction Tax would be a resource for the EU to partly allocate for WHO needs, writes Daniele Dionisio. … the Authors Guild sued over the fact. But U.S … […]

    Reply
  2. JURIST – Paper Chase: Federal judge dismisses Google books copyright infringement case | lennyesq says:
    15/11/2013 at 6:49 pm

    […] CNET: Judge Dismisses Authors’ Case Against Google Books (ip-watch.org) […]

    Reply
  3. Google remembers information wants freedom, reverses decision to force 9to5google.com to change name | says:
    25/02/2016 at 7:06 pm

    […] of patent trolls, the company that waged court battles against the globe’s newspapers and book publishers for the right to index their work and present blurbs to users. This was the search engine that was […]

    Reply

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