Google Begins to Scale Back Its Scanning of Books From University Libraries - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-08-20

Summary:

“Google has been quietly slowing down its book-scanning work with partner libraries, according to librarians involved with the vast Google Books digitization project. But what that means for the company's long-term investment in the work remains unclear. Google was not willing to say much about its plans. ‘We've digitized more than 20 million books to date and continue to scan books with our library partners,’ a Google spokeswoman told The Chronicle in an e-mailed statement. At Wisconsin, the scanning pace is ‘something less than half of what it was’ in 2006, the year the work started there, said Edward V. Van Gemert, the university's interim director of libraries. Wisconsin's agreement with Google stipulated that the scanning would continue for at least six years or until half a million works had been digitized. ‘We anticipated this slowdown,’ he said. It will be six years as of October 2012, and 600,000 volumes have been digitized so far, Mr. Van Gemertestimates. ‘It would have been next to impossible for the library to come up with the resources to digitize that amount of material,’ he said. ‘So I really cast the partnership as being highly successful at a time when digitization was highly needed.’ He credited Google's work with helping the partner libraries and others create the HathiTrust digital repository, which now contains more than 10 million scanned volumes. That, he said, ‘has allowed us to think differently about out-of-copyright material and the preservation of resources in our collections.’ According to Mr. Courant at Michigan, the slackening pace reflects a natural maturation of the project. "They've done about 5.5 million volumes from our collections," he said. That means "the pickings are getting kind of slim... Some institutions struck agreements with Google to scan only specific collections. Much of that work has now wrapped up. The University of Texas at Austin, for instance, signed on to have Google digitize its Latin American collection—about half a million volumes, said Fred Heath, vice provost and director of the University of Texas Libraries... Google completed the work far more quickly than the university could have done by itself, according to Mr. Heath. ‘We figured we could do it in a hundred years,’ he said. Google did it in two... Google isn't saying whether it has pulled back from its longstanding goal of collecting all of the world's knowledge. Some of its digitization efforts have shifted to Europe... Meanwhile, a copyright-infringement lawsuit brought against it by authors' and publishers' groups drags on. HathiTrust and five universities, including Michigan's and Wisconsin's, face their own challenge from the Authors Guild and other groups over control of the scanned works...”

Link:

http://chronicle.com/article/Google-Begins-to-Scale-Back/131109/

Updated:

08/16/2012, 06:08

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.google oa.pd oa.books oa.litigation oa.digitization oa.hathi oa.u.wisconsin oa.authors_guild oa.u.michigan oa.u.texas oa.copyright

Authors:

abernard

Date tagged:

08/20/2012, 18:58

Date published:

03/10/2012, 01:13