Thursday, August 31, 2006

When some executives of Google came to the Publishers Association to discuss their plans for digitising in copyright material they brought with them two 'communications consultants' better known in English as spin doctors. I wondered why. I now know.

I do not not know the business editor of the Times, James Harding. I assume he's an intelligent and diligent journalist who does his best to report and comment accurately. What then explains this article? How does an announcement that Google is digitising some classic and out of copyright books make the main leader in the business section of a great newspaper? The business impact is close to zilch. The books mentioned have already been digitised many times over and so it's really not news. Google have already press released any number of times about their various library scanning projects. And purple prose such as this:

Google may have just done for book-reading what e-mail has done for letter-writing. Yesterday the internet search engine started making classic, out-of-copyright books available to download and print free. The service makes available to everyone the dusty pages of old tomes that once were reserved only for those with privileged access to the likes of the Bodleian library in Oxford and Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Google likes to boast that its mission is to organise the world’s information, but it is doing something better than that: it is is democratising it.

 

But the bit that's really got my dander up is where he (or a spin doctor?) says:'Inevitably, the Google service has been greeted by the book industry with the kind of welcome normally reserved for a can of kerosene and a box of matches.' This is garbage. The industry has no quarrel at all with Google over the digitisation and searchability of out of copyright works. We quarrel with them over the use of the copyright material produced by authors whose copyright we are obliged to protect. They wish to usurp that copyright without prior permission. That is our argument and it is straightforward to understand. Presumably the 'communication consultants' failed to make that clear to James Harding and he didn't think it worth finding out why publishers have reacted the way they have. The positive publicity - e.g. the headline of the article, 'Google does book-reading a huge favour' - will  certainly have justified the spin doctors' doubtless exorbitant fees but, frankly, it makes me feel a bit queasy and I wonder what else I should recognise as complete rubbish in the Times.

Coincidentally in the same issue of the paper there are big articles on page 2 of Times 2 on Paris Hilton and Jeffrey Archer. After yesterday's blog should I begin to suspect a conspiracy? I also wondered yesterday whether juxtaposing the names would increase traffic? The answer is no. We had 1628 visitors yesterday against an August average of just over 1500 a day. In scientific research, negative results can be just as valuable as positive ones, albeit slightly less fulfilling. 

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8/31/2006 9:29:17 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
I do sometimes feel that there is a bit of mindless ( possibly motivated)and sarcastic perspective by putting book publishers in negative light, depict them as luddites and create a bit of 'halo' around what companies like Google do. They must be given fair credit for many revolutionary changes in online but it sometimes becomes sickening when trivia is posed as changing the world upside down. I do understand that many publishers need to change their mindsets at many levels but at the same time I have seen a distinct change in approach in last one year or so at least where publishers have started to recognize the digital challenges and opportunities better. Yes, there is scope of improvement but lets not forget that publishers have to be inclusive as a whole by addressing not just the digital natives or digital immigrants but digital non-residents, the children, the
less techno-savvy, the non-IT, non-information industry people, veterans and many many others.
Publishers by virtue of their trade as a whole have to have sensibilities towards broaders sections of society certainly includig its direct stakeholders and that must weigh when
trying to change.

Raj
8/31/2006 2:07:39 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
The answer to your question regarding the purpose of James Harding writings is obvious. For one, you incorrectly hyperlink to his piece as an 'article' when it fact it is commentary. Journalists and Cable TV news outlets learned being an opinionated pundit with commentary is more profitable than merely stating the obvious facts and being objectively neutral. The objective is to polarize the blogosphere and bring more attention to your web site which in turn equals more traffic and revenue. He may be smart enough to know he can irk the publishing industry by supporting Google position to get people like you to write about and link to his web site.

So in essence, you working the search engine keyword experiment with Paris Hilton and Jeff Archer keywords is the passive way - James Harding chose the smarter path of polarization and you are one of those that fell for it. He won this round.

Now back to Google. Perfect 10 filed a lawsuit against Google stating Google take copyrighted images of prn and aggegate them to boost their traffic. If you think about this claim and understand how much traffic you would get from the web being the biggest respository to search for copyrighted prn, that there is your precedent.
8/31/2006 5:51:29 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
There is a type of self-destructive arrogance that comes over the people of any company when said company reaches a certain size. It killed AOL and it may well kill Google.

Where Paris Hilton and Jeffrey Archer are concerned, your lack of response can be laid to our growing disenchantment with the pernicious and continuing overexposure of Mr. Archer, and his unseemly fixation on Lady Margaret Thatcher.
8/31/2006 9:35:45 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Regardless of what you encounter outside the curtained world, it's still summer and there's not much going on, even in business. Thus Google's foray may become "big" news to those drumming their thumbs at a keyboard.

As for Paris and Jeff, I've not read about either lately. Not interested. I prefer a good novel, which leads me in other directions entirely...
9/2/2006 10:50:03 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Raj

I think you've hit the nail on th ehead.

R
richard charkin