Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

November 01st, 2008 | copyright and fair use, creative lawyering, Legal News, originality, problem solving

Is Google no longer the Copy-Left’s white knight?

Google has been a very interesting company to anyone concerned with copyright law.  Google has taken on lawsuits raising issues others don’t have the resources to fight over, and Google has been very effective in making good arguments in those cases.  Fred von Lohman now wonders if those days are gone:

Late last month, Google announced a settlement in its lawsuit with book publishers and authors over its Google Book Search offering. . . .

The Book Search case is just one of a series of high-stakes lawsuits that Google has taken up in the name of the disruptive innovation that fuels the Internet economy. . . .

Google, assisted by its expensive, top-drawer legal team, has a track record of winning these precedent-setting Internet cases. And by winning, Google sets a precedent that other innovators can rely on, as well. In essence, Google’s legal investments have paid dividends for the entire Internet innovation economy.

Until now. By settling rather than taking the case all the way (many copyright experts thought Google had a good chance of winning), Google has solved its own copyright problem – but not anyone else’s. Without a legal precedent about the copyright status of book scanning, future innovators are left to defend their own copyright lawsuits. In essence, Google has left its former copyright adversaries to maul any competitors that want to follow its lead.

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