French court rules against Google in books case

  • Associated Press
  • Friday, December 18, 2009 8:15am
  • Business

PARIS — A Paris court ruled today that Google Inc. is breaking French law with its policy of digitizing books, handing the U.S. Internet giant a euro10,000 ($14,300)-a-day fine until it rids its database of the literary extracts.

A judge also ordered Google to pay euro300,000 ($430,000) in damages and interest to French publisher La Martiniere, which brought the case on behalf of a group of French publishers.

The attorney for Google, Alexandra Neri, said Google plans to appeal the decision.

Google’s plans to scan millions of books to make them available online has drawn criticism from publishers and libraries in both the U.S. and Europe.

Even if the case doesn’t have much financial impact on Google or force a big change in its book-scanning strategy, it is a reminder that its ambitions are increasingly colliding with fears that the company is getting too powerful.

The head of the French publisher’s union said he was “completely satisfied” with the verdict.

“It shows Google that they are not the kings of the world and they can’t do whatever they want,” said Serge Eyrolles, president of France’s Syndicat National de l’Edition. He said Google had scanned 100,000 French books into its database — 80 percent of which were under copyright.

Eyrolles said French publishers would still like to work with Google to digitize their books, “but only if they stop playing around with us and start respecting intellectual property rights.”

Philippe Colombet, the head of Google’s book scanning project in France, said the company disagrees with the judgment.

“French readers now face the threat of losing access to a significant body of knowledge and falling behind the rest of Internet users,” Colombet said an e-mailed statement. “We believe that displaying a limited number of short extracts from books complies with copyright legislation both in France and the U.S. — and improves access to books,” Colombet said.

Google defended its publication of excerpts of copyright-protected material at a trial in September.

A lawyer for the plaintiffs said that using select excerpts without permission “is a bad representation of the works.”

U.S. authors and publishers also sued Mountain View, Calif.-based Google. The parties have settled, but are renegotiating details after the U.S. Justice Department concluded that the original deal probably violates antitrust law.

The top U.S. copyright official and the governments in Germany and France also have raised objections about the settlement overstepping its bounds.

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