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  • ‘At the Crossroads of Legal Code, Computer code, and the Codex’: In Re Books Presentations Now Online

    On October 26 and 27—yes, just before Hurricane Sandy slammed the Northeast—New York Law School held In re Books, a “conference on law and the future of books.” Couldn’t make it to the conference? No problem—the full video of the conference is now available online, with downloadable versions ready soon. And check out Grimmelmann’s personal reflections on the program at the PWxyz blog.

  • Appeal Filings Outline Authors Guild’s Objections to HathiTrust Opinion

    With a new round of filings hitting the docket last week, the Authors Guild appeal of Judge Harold Baer’s landmark copyright decision is underway. The broad appeal raises a handful of key questions on which the AG is seeking review by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, including whether the district court erred in finding the scan plan to be fair use.

  • Change You Can Believe In: ALA Preview 2013

    Since the release of the Republican Study Committee’s copyright reform report several weeks ago, a discussion has ignited among various interest groups about whether a fundamental revision of copyright law is needed.

  • Overruled: PW Talks to ARL’s Brandon Butler: ALA Preview 2013

    Sure, for the general observer, 2012 might well be remembered as a year of frustration for libraries, dominated by the lingering impasse over e-book lending.

  • Authors Guild Appeals Loss in Book Scanning Case

    The Authors Guild has notified the court that it will appeal Judge Harold Baer’s landmark October 10 ruling in the Authors Guild vs. HathiTrust case.

  • Publishers Ordered to Pay $3 Million in GSU Copyright Case

    Not only did publishers not get the injunctive relief they sought in a closely watched case over e-reserves, last week they paid the tab.

  • Supreme Court Probes ‘Parade of Horribles’ in Wiley Case

    At the forefront: whether a ruling for Wiley might harm secondary markets and incentivize manufacturers, including publishers, to move their operations overseas in a bid to further control downstream distribution.

  • As Wiley Case Heads to the Supreme Court, Libraries Join “Owners Rights” Coalition

    The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments on October 29 that could decide whether long-held “first sale” rights under the Copyright Act extend to goods manufactured overseas. But a newly formed coalition of business and libraries is already anticipating the next front in the battle: Congress.

  • Unintended Consequences In the HathiTrust Case

    Digitization proponents and library advocates hailed the October 10 decision in the Authors Guild v. HathiTrust case as an unequivocal, emphatic victory for fair use.

  • Authors Guild Pondering Next Steps in HathiTrust Lawsuit

    The Authors Guild had no immediate comment on Wednesday’s court decision in the HathiTrust case, but in a post on its Web site this morning the Guild said it “disagree[s] with nearly every aspect of the court’s ruling.”

  • Google Scanning Is Fair Use Says Judge

    In a major ruling, Federal judge Harold Baer this week tossed the Authors Guild case against the HathiTrust. In granting the HathiTrust’s motion for summary judgment, Baer ruled that that the scan program was a clear fair use under the the copyright law.

  • Publishers Settle Google Books Lawsuit

    The Association of American Publishers and Google’s agreement last week to settle the publishers’ long-running litigation over Google’s library scanning program put an end to the lengthy and expensive suit, but without resolving any of the underlying copyright and fair use issues. The main component of the deal: copyright owners with books scanned by Google under its library program can choose to “opt out” of the program and have their books removed. Of course, that settlement condition is something Google has offered copyright owners with books in the program all along.

  • Google, Publishers Settle Lawsuit over Book Scanning

    It’s over—at least for publishers. The Association of American Publishers and Google today announced they have settled their long-running litigation over Google’s library book scanning.

  • Going Public

    Talks between librarians and publishers are set to continue this week on the long-simmering e-book issue, including an AAP-sponsored discussion featuring ALA president Maureen Sullivan on September 27. Frustrated by a lack of progress, however, and in some cases regression, on the e-book issue, ALA officials are taking their case beyond the boardrooms, directly to their patrons and supporters. In an open letter obtained by PW, ALA president Maureen Sullivan raises the stakes in the e-book debate, asking readers: “which side will you be on.”

  • Appeals Court Grants Stay of Google Proceedings

    In an order filed Monday morning, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals granted a stay, with the consent of the parties, in the Authors Guild vs. Google case until after it issues its decision on Judge Denny Chin’s May 31 ruling granting the case class action status.

  • Publishers Appeal 'Flawed' Decision in GSU E-Reserves Case

    The three publisher plaintiffs in the Georgia State University e-reserve case yesterday lodged an appeal with the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, seeking to overturn one of the most significant fair use rulings in decades.

  • Publishers Appeal Ruling in GSU E-Reserves Case

    Officials at the Association of American Publishers have confirmed that the publisher plaintiffs in the Georgia State University e-reserve case have lodged an appeal with the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals.

  • AAP, SIIA Urge Supreme Court to Uphold Key First Sale Ruling

    In separate amicus briefs filed with the Supreme Court last week, both the Association of American Publishers (AAP), and the Software and Information Industry Association of America (SIIA) argue that the doctrine of first sale does not apply to foreign-made works.

  • After the DoJ Settlement

    On September 5, federal judge Denise Cote approved a deal between the Department of Justice and three publishers (Hachette, HarperCollins, and Simon & Schuster) to settle claims of e-book price fixing. What happens now?

  • As Expected, No Stay in Google Case

    In a bit of procedural news, Judge Denny Chin last week issued an order denying an August 17 request by Google to stay the Authors Guild's current lawsuit against them until after the Second Circuit Court of Appeals rules on Judge Chin’s decision to certify the case as a class action.

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