More on the Google Deal
After the jump I have reposted the excellent comments on Google that Sivacracy readers Jessamyn (major voice in the library community) and Michael Zimmer (super-smart doctoral student in my department) posted. I made their suggested links hot. Please read their posts and links.
And please add your voice and suggestions.
• What are the costs and benefits of the Google-library deal?
• Is this the sort of thing libraries should be doing?
• How would such a system affect your research/book buying/library habits?
• How would the "Google paradigm" (in Zimmer's words) affect our world?
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The broadest issue is the widespread acceptance of the "Google paradigm" for organizing, distributing and accessing information. Google has become the "center of gravity" for information navigation and knowledge acquisition, a situation that begs for critical examination.
Additionally, privacy advocates fear Google's ability to track user's library usage as they access texts via the Google Print project, compounding the privacy concerns related to personalized search.
Posted by: Michael Zimmer at June 1, 2005 05:39 PM
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A lot of my concerns were summed up in this article by Wade Roush, particularly the ownership of information issue.
While I understand why Google feels entitled to dictate terms of use on content they have "value added" through scanning and digitization to, it's a far cry from making that material flat-out AVAILABLE -- for whatever you want, for whatever you can imagne -- the way the library did, and does.
Google indexes my web site but Google does not own my web site. From the article:
"The Michigan library, says Wilkin, may do whatever it likes with the digital scans of its own holdings—as long as it doesn’t share them with companies that could use them to compete with Google. Such limitations may prove uncomfortable, but most librarians say they can live with them, considering that their holdings wouldn’t be digitized at all without Google’s help."
Brewster Kahle's doors metaphor is worth learning.
It really looks like this will increase access at low cost, but that's different -- especially in other countries -- from no cost. I suppose one could argue that having one copy of a book in one location places prohibitive costs on someone who is not at that location in the current library model, but the larger library network that you can reach via interlibrary loan and co-operative sharing takes care of a lot of that, assuming people know about it.
In short, it's going to happen. Libraries can play more of a leadership role both in preserviing access to these materials and keeping Google in check when they try to use their massive computing systems and storage banks to increase their own market share for their advertising. Putting this sort of knowledge-is-power power in the hands of a publicly held company [even one that does no evil] which has certain shareholder obligations, is concerning to me.
Posted by: jessamyn at June 3, 2005 08:50 AM
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