In 2005, the US Authors Guild sued Google alleging that its plans to create a digital library amounted to massive copyright infringement.
In its defence, Google
said its plans constituted "fair use" because it was only putting
excerpts of texts online.
US judge Denny Chin
has now sided with Google and dismissed the case brought by the Guild.
Long
fight
Judge Chin accepted
Google's argument that its scanning project was "fair use" adding
that the project provides "significant public benefits".
The decision could be
a significant milestone for the long-running legal battle between Google, the
Authors Guild and US publishers. Both the publishers and authors started legal
action over the scanning project in 2005.
Initially, authors and
publishers negotiated with Google together. This led to a settlement agreement
in 2008 that would have involved Google paying $125m (£78m) into a fund that
would be used to compensate the writers of copyrighted works that appeared in
the online library. The agreement also placed restrictions on how much of a
book Google could make searchable.
In March 2011, the
settlement agreement was thrown out by a US court which said it gave Google a
"de facto monopoly" to copy books.
This led US publishers
to negotiate separately and they reached an agreement with Google in October
2012. Financial terms of that deal have not been released.
The latest decision
denies the copyright claim brought by US authors. Neither Google nor the
Authors Guild have commented on the decision.
In April 2013, Google
said it had scanned more than 30 million works ready for inclusion in its
digital library.
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