Google begins digitising books
Google begins digitising books
Google has begun its controversial project to digitise millions of books for online viewing.

Washington: Google on Thursday launched the first phase of its controversial effort to digitise millions of books for online viewing, but said it would limit access to any copyrighted material for now.

The Internet search giant said the initial collection will include "public domain" works those without current copyright protection.

"Because they're out of copyright, these cultural artifacts can be read in their entirety online at http://print.google.com, where anyone can search and browse every page," Google said in a statement.

These webpages are fully searchable and users can save individual page images.

The works being made available include US Civil War regimental histories and early American writings from the University of Michigan; congressional acts and other government documents from Stanford; works of Henry James from Harvard; and biographies of New York citizens and other collected biographies from the New York Public Library.

Google said the material being offered now represents "just a small fraction of the information that will eventually be made available as a result of Google Print."

The company did not address how it would respond to issues of copyright if it goes ahead with plans to offer online versions of more current books.

Officials at Google said that it will resume scanning of its online in-copyright works on its blog this week.

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://lamidix.com/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!