首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Google’s Plan for World’s Biggest Online Library: Philanthropy Or Act of Piracy? In recent years, teams of workers dispatche
Google’s Plan for World’s Biggest Online Library: Philanthropy Or Act of Piracy? In recent years, teams of workers dispatche
admin
2012-02-18
28
问题
Google’s Plan for World’s Biggest Online Library: Philanthropy Or Act of Piracy?
In recent years, teams of workers dispatched by Google have been working hard to make digital copies of books. So far, Google has scanned more than 10 million titles from libraries in America and Europe — including half a million volumes held by the Bodleian in Oxford. The exact method it uses is unclear; the company does not allow outsiders to observe the process.
Why is Google undertaking such a venture? Why is it even interested in all those out-of-print library books, most of which have been gathering dust on forgotten shelves for decades? The company claims its motives are essentially public-spirited. Its overall mission, after all, is to "organise the world’s information", so it would be odd if that information did not include books.
The company likes to present itself as having lofty aspirations. "This really isn’t about making money. We are doing this for the good of society." As Santiago de la Mora, head of Google Books for Europe, puts it: "By making it possible to search the millions of books that exist today, we hope to expand the frontiers of human knowledge."
Dan Clancy, the chief architect of Google Books, does seem genuine in his conviction that this is primarily a philanthropic (慈善的) exercise. "Google’s core business is search and find, so obviously what helps improve Google’s search engine is good for Google," he says. "But we have never built a spreadsheet (电子数据表) outlining the financial benefits of this, and I have never had to justify the amount I am spending to the company’s founders."
It is easy, talking to Clancy and his colleagues, to be swept along by their missionary passion. But Google’s book-scanning project is proving controversial. Several opponents have recently emerged, ranging from rival tech giants such as Microsoft and Amazon to small bodies representing authors and publishers across the world. In broad terms, these opponents have levelled two sets of criticisms at Google.
First, they have questioned whether the primary responsibility for digitally archiving the world’s books should be allowed to fall to a commercial company. In a recent essay in the New York Review of Books, Robert Darnton, the head of Harvard University’s library, argued that because such books are a common resource — the possession of us all — only public, not-for-profit bodies should be given the power to control them.
The second related criticism is that Google’s scanning of books is actually illegal. This allegation has led to Google becoming mired in (PS A) a legal battle whose scope and complexity makes the Jarndyce and Jarndyce case in Charles Dickens’ Bleak House look straightforward.
At its centre, however, is one simple issue: that of copyright. The inconvenient fact about most books, to which Google has arguably paid insufficient attention, is that they are protected by copyright. Copyright laws differ from country to country, but in general protection extends for the duration of an author’s life and for a substantial period afterwards, thus allowing the author’s heirs to benefit. (In Britain and America, this post-death period is 70 years.) This means, of course, that almost all of the books published in the 20th century are still under copyright — and the last century saw more books published than in all previous centuries combined. Of the roughly 40 million books in US libraries, for example, an estimated 32 million are in copyright. Of these, some 27 million are out of print.
Outside the US, Google has made sure only to scan books that are out of copyright and thus in the "public domain" (works such as the Bodleian’s first edition of Middlemarch, which anyone can read for free on Google Books Search).
But, within the US, the company has scanned both in-copyright and out-of-copyright works. In its defence, Google points out that it displays only small segments of books that are in copyright — arguing that such displays are "fair use". But critics allege that by making electronic copies of these books without first seeking the permission of copyright holders, Google has committed piracy.
"The key principle of copyright law has always been that works can be copied only once authors have expressly given their permission," says Piers Blofeld, of the Sheil Land literary agency in London. "Google has reversed this — it has simply copied all these works without bothering to ask."
In 2005, the Authors Guild of America, together with a group of US publishers, launched a class action suit (集团诉讼) against Google that, after more than two years of negotiation, ended with an announcement last October that Google and the claimants had reached an out-of-court settlement. The full details are complicated — the text alone runs to 385 pages — and trying to summarise it is no easy task. "Part of the problem is that it is basically incomprehensible," says Blofeld, one of the settlement’s most vocal British critics.
Broadly, the deal provides a mechanism for Google to compensate authors and publishers whose rights it has breached (including giving them a share of any future revenue it generates from their works). In exchange for this, the rights holders agree not to sue Google in future.
This settlement hands Google the power — but only with the agreement of individual rights holders — to exploit its database of out-of-print books. It can include them in subscription deals sold to libraries or sell them individually under a consumer licence. It is these commercial provisions that are proving the settlement’s most controversial aspect.
Critics point out that, by giving Google the right to commercially exploit its database, the settlement paves the way for a subtle shift in the company’s role from provider of information to seller. "Google’s business model has always been to provide information for free, and sell advertising on the basis of the traffic this generates," points out James Grimmelmann, associate professor at New York Law School. Now. he says, because of the settlement’s provisions, Google could become a significant force in bookselling.
Interest in this aspect of the settlement has focused on "orphan" works, where there is no known copyright holder — these make up an estimated 5-10% of the books Google has scanned. Under the settlement, when no rights holders come forward and register their interest in a work, commercial control automatically reverts to Google. Google will be able to display up to 20% of orphan works for free, include them in its subscription deals to libraries and sell them to individual buyers under the consumer licence.
It is by no means certain that the settlement will be enacted (执行) — it is the subject of a fairness hearing in the US courts. But if it is enacted, Google will in effect be off the hook as far as copyright violations in the US are concerned. Many people are seriously concerned by this — and the company is likely to face challenges in other courts around the world.
No one knows the precise use Google will make of the intellectual property it has gained by scanning the world’s library books, and the truth, as Gleick, an American science writer and member of the Authors Guild, points out, is that the company probably doesn’t even know itself. But what is certain is that, in some way or other, Google’s entrance into digital bookselling will have a significant impact on the book world in the years to come.
Google’s entrance into digital bookselling will tremendously______in the future.
选项
答案
impact on the book world
解析
空前的will tremendously表明,本空应填一原形动词(短语)。根据题干中的Google’s entrance into digital bookselling will将本题出处定位到末段末句。题干中的Google’s entrance into digital bookselling will为原文信息的再现,in the future对应in the years to come,tremendously对应significant,故将significant后面的名词短语impact on the book world改为动词短语形式即可得出答案,又因为impact既作名词也作动词,故答案为impact on the book world。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/UXvFFFFM
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
CholesterolandHeartDiseaseDoyouknowyourcholesterollevel?Manypeopledon’t.Ahighlevelofcholesterolinthebloo
A、Thelibraryiswithinwalkingdistance.B、Thestreetsarenotingoodcondition.C、Themanshouldgetacarinstead.D、Theman
A、Sheshouldpresenthimabookonmusic.B、Theteacherhassomeinterestsotherthanreading.C、It’sagoodideabecausethete
Tobesuccessfulinajob【B1】______,youshould【B2】______certainpersonalandprofessionalqualities.Youneedtocreateagoo
Afewyearsagoitwas【B1】______tospeakofagenerationgap,adivisionbetweenyoungpeopleandtheirelders.Parents【B2】____
IsCollegeReallyWorththeMoney?TheRealWorldEsteGriffithhaditallfiguredout.WhenshegraduatedfromtheUniv
MoreattentionwaspaidtothequalityofproductioninFranceatthetimeofReneCoty.CharlesDeschanelwasthenthefinancia
A、EveryoneenjoyedhimselfatJohn’sparty.B、Thewomandidn’tenjoyJohn’spartiesatall.C、Itwillbethefirsttimeforthe
BalancingCollegeLifeandAcademics1.ControlYourSchedule;Don’tLetYourScheduleControlYouOrganizationandtime
TheMid-summerDay,ahundred-year-oldtraditioninScandinavia,fallsonJune22ndor23rd,whenthesunwillreachitshighest
随机试题
以下属于灾难医学的主要任务的是()
顿咳常见于
上进心强,性急易怒,做事匆忙注重效率的行为风格,被Friedman称为容易患病冠心病和高血压的性格是
剧烈运动时,耗氧量最多可达安静时的
已知数字信号A和数字信号B的波形如图所示,则数字信号的波形为()。
厚度为3~5mm的净片玻璃可直接用于的部位是()。
某外贸公司2021年6月份从一般纳税人处购进八音盒10000只,不含税单价80元/只,已取得增值税专用发票。将外购的八音盒全部报关出口,离岸单价15美元/只,此笔出口已收汇并作销售处理(美元与人民币比价为1:6.8,退税率为13%)。该笔出口业务应退增值税
一、注意事项1.本次申论考试是对应考者阅读理解能力、综合分析能力、提出和解决问题能力、写作能力和文字表达能力的综合测试。2.请使用简体汉字作答。二、给定资料1.2006年1月17日,一个类似美国“水门”事件中“深喉”的人物,在清华
简述批判教育学的主要观点。
我国《合同法》第39条第1款规定:“采用格式条款订立合同的,提供格式条款的一方应当遵循公平原则确定当事人之间的权利和义务,并采取合理的方式提请对方注意免除或者限制其责任的条款,按照对方的要求,对该条款予以说明。”请分析:(2016年一专一第58题
最新回复
(
0
)