google book search - ReadWriteWeb http://www.readwriteweb.com/feeds/tag/google book search en Copyright 2009 Richard MacManus readwriteweb@gmail.com Tue, 24 Nov 2009 05:00:55 -0800 http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/?v=4.23-en http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss Google Books Comes to the Search Options Panel inside_google_books_logo_sep09.pngGoogle just announced that all the content from Google Books is now searchable from the Search Options panel the company introduced earlier this year. Until today, users could only use the Search Options panel to restrict searches to videos, forums, and reviews. This move should give Google Books a boost in visibility. It will also make it easier for users to search for books and magazines right from Google's default search page. There have been some rumors that Google plans to sell eBooks on Google Books by the end of this. Maybe this is a step in that direction.

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]]> While Google is obviously caught up in a broad controversy around its Google Books project and, more specifically, the Google Books settlement, the company is clearly dedicated to making Google Books a standard feature of its search business. The company continues to add new features to Google Books and just yesterday, Google announced a partnership that will allow On Demand Books to print books from Google's archive of public domain books on its Espresso Book machines and turn them back into paperbacks.

For now, this new feature is only available in the United States, though according to a blog post on the Google Book Search blog, the company plans to make this feature "available elsewhere in the future."

google_books_search_options.jpg

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_books_comes_to_the_search_options_panel.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_books_comes_to_the_search_options_panel.php News Fri, 18 Sep 2009 10:55:54 -0800 Frederic Lardinois
Bits of Destruction Hit the Book Publishing Business: Part 2 In part 1 of this series, we looked at the three big waves crashing down on the traditional book publishing business: Google Search, the Kindle and e-books, and print on demand. In this second part, we'll try to wipe the muck from our crystal ball and see how this could play out in the future, specifically for the major players of book publishing: readers, authors, printers, publishers, retailers, and e-book device vendors.

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]]> What Will Readers Get?

Readers have the money that makes all of this happen, so they will, eventually, get what they want, which is:

  • Broad selection of titles,
  • Choice of format and device,
  • Fast delivery,
  • Low prices,
  • Freemium model.

In other words, readers will be able to order any book in the universe and have it sent to them in print wherever they want or sent digitally to whatever device they have. Readers have grown accustomed to getting their online content for free, so they will expect to get at least a degraded experience via the regular browser (the "free" in freemium).

This will take a while to play out. We live in a world today of bilateral negotiations, so different titles are available for different devices and in different bookstores. But play out it will. This is the logic of digitization. Until we reach that stage, plenty of entrepreneurial opportunities will exist to meet those reader demands.

Readers will pay more for print. They will understand that it costs more. Some readers will resist e-books as long as they live. Others will be selective, choosing print for certain titles and situations and digital for others.

Will Books Be Free?

Here is my free review of my free copy of "Free."

Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail, recently came out with the book "Free: The Future of a Radical Price." So the question of whether books will be free in the future is a natural one to ask. The short answer is, No. If books became free, authors would stop writing, printers would stop printing, and electronics factories would stop churning out e-book readers. In other words, there would be nothing to read... except:

  • Free copies given to reviewers to generate free reviews. I got a free copy of "Free" when I attended Wired's "Disruptive by Design" conference. But the practice of giving away free copies to reviewers has been happening since publishing began.
  • Free excerpts and abstracts online. Using free content to entice you to a paid version will continue. Freemium models will be the norm. People with more time than money will take the free version online through their browser, even if the paid print version or e-book is a much better experience. This is nothing new, either: people with more time than money already get free books through their local library. Enabling people with more time than money to read for free is a good thing.
  • Promotional publishing. Traditional brochures have lost all credibility and value in this online world. And everyone has a blog; blogs are no longer differentiators. So, published books are the new blogs. Consultants can charge more if they have a book published. To be credible, the book would need a published price (preferably a high one), but all potential clients would get one for free. This is just an extension of blogging as an attention-getting tool.
  • Passion publishing. This has been called "vanity publishing" in the industry. This is a pejorative term that can be translated as, "This is not real publishing because no one is paying for it." If the author's passion relates to a cause, funding may come from a non-profit foundation. But volume will accumulate from simple books such as your family memoir or a cookbook inspired by your vacation in Tuscany. Again, this is not much different from spending time on a blog. Free books may come with advertising, like blogs.

How much does Chris Anderson's "Free" book cost on Amazon? List price: $26.99, discounted to $16.19. Not free.

Next: Authors, Printers...

Authors

What about people who harbor a desire to live off of their writing? After all, most writers write because they couldn't imagine not doing it. It is not a profession in the normal sense. They feel compelled to write in the same way that painters feel compelled to paint and musicians are driven to create music. But they have to eat and pay the rent, too.

Intermediaries who mistake that urge to write as a willingness to be exploited will get their heads handed to to them. In a free market, intermediaries are always replaceable, but we need both our authors and readers to always remain motivated.

We are seeing today the early phase of intensified competition in book publishing, as is happening in other industries affected by digitization. Competition will mean, first, more choice and lower prices for readers and, secondly, a bigger share of the pie for authors.

Specifically, we expect to see the following:

  1. The end of advances. The irony is that the authors who really need advances, the new ones scraping by on Ramen noodles, cannot get them. Meanwhile authors who don't need them, the ones living the high life off of previous royalties or whatever made them famous enough to get an advance, are showered with ridiculous advances at the end of bidding wars between big publishers. Authors will write without advances. Unlike movies, books are relatively cheap to create. In the digitized world of e-books and print on demand, authors get paid as soon as someone buys the first copy. The lack of an advance will be compensated for by a bigger share of the revenue pie.
  2. Authors getting a bigger share of the pie. It makes no sense for authors to get only 10% in a digitized world. We expect this to grow from 10% to 30% or more. Digitization takes most of the costs out of the supply chain. So, unless an intermediary such as Amazon charges monopoly-like rents, authors will get a bigger share. Amazon has amazing power today and will squeeze everyone in the supply chain. But new competition will emerge (we'll look at this later), and keeping authors happy is critical to the success of publishers. Authors are like software developers, not powerful individually but incredibly powerful en masse (and just as ornery!). Authors will need a bigger share also because prices will be coming down. But the drop in price, coupled with globalization, will open up new markets in which to sell books and therefore generate more revenue.
  3. Authors creating the finished product. Today, authors write and publishers look after the cover art and editing. If authors were to get 30% or more, they would have to take on these two other jobs. But in a world of desktop publishing tools and social networks to organize work and editing, this will not be hard.
  4. Online marketing replacing book tours. It is the bane of the author's life. The book tour is wonderful the first time: "Wow, I am a real author now." But this is not the same as musicians going on tour. Musicians are performing their job in its natural environment during live shows; not true of authors reflecting on their books on stage. There are many and much better ways to promote books online.

The future of authors can be summed up, then, as: do more of the work and get a bigger percentage of the retail price, which will be lower.

Printers

Printers. Who loves you, baby! Predicting the decline of the printing industry is easy, but hopeful signs exist:

  • Print on demand will significantly increase the types of books that can get printed.
  • Lower prices, resulting from costs eliminated from the supply chain, will increase demand.
  • Globalization will increase demand.

It will be interesting to see how digital printing technology, the fundamental driver of print on demand, changes the role of printing over time. Today, we have two extremes:

  1. Mass-scale printers, centrally located. We even saw printing move offshore, where labor is cheaper. But this will likely reverse in a print-on-demand world, where immediacy and delivery costs are critical: printing will be done closer to the consumer.
  2. Do-it-yourself printing, also known as using the printer in your home or office. Do-it-yourself printing is both expensive (those ink cartridge costs really add up) and a hassle.

Digital printing could quite possibly move to a hyper-local network model. Orders would be automatically routed to the printer closest to the consumer. The already existing infrastructure of small-scale local print shops would welcome this model. The book would then be delivered (quickly and cheaply) to a local retailer or the consumer's home or office. Perhaps the printer would be located in the back office of the retailer?

This fits the trend on the Internet of everything moving towards the edge. It is also an environmentally friendly model, reducing emissions from delivery trucks.

The model won't really help existing large-scale, centralized printers, though.

Next: Publishers...

Publishers

NYMag has a very good article on how big old publishers are faring. It is not a happy tale. It illustrates once again the perils of financially engineered consolidation (think banks and car companies). Book publishing used to be a business in which small firms, run by passionate editors, found great authors and developed personal relationships with them. Occasionally, they struck it rich when one of their authors "caught fire" with the reading public.

Today feels like the calm before the storm. Publishers are worrying about the recession. That is a small wave and will soon pass. But we won't be returning to normal when GDP growth resumes. The three big digitization waves -- Google Book Search, e-books, and print on demand -- will have a far bigger and more lasting impact.

Publishers did quite well during the first phase, when retailers got "Amazoned." They sold more of their back catalog (i.e. they enjoyed the long tail).

On the surface, all is well with the Kindle. Publishers get the same percentage from an e-book that they get when a retailer sells a print version of the book, and their costs are lower. Amazon is playing along. But when it gets more traction, it will squeeze.

Publishers have to figure out not so much how to negotiate with Amazon (competition from other consumer electronic devices will take care of that), but how to remain relevant to authors. Even saying this seems contrarian. Publishers have had all the power till now. The bane of an author's life has been to find a publisher. Plastering the wall with rejection letters and recounting tales of arrogant editors are rites of passage for every author.

Unbundling Publishers

But what services exactly do publishers provide to authors? Let's disassemble the package:

  1. Advances. Newbies don't get them, and the rest don't need them.
  2. Editing. Do you have a social network that could give you constructive criticism?
  3. Cover design. Yes, a great one can make a book. But how much do graphic designers charge?
  4. ISBN. Here is an interesting one. To be a publisher, you need international standard book numbers (ISBNs). This is actually what defines you as a publisher. An ISBN is a 13-digit number that uniquely identifies a book or book-like product that is published internationally (read more about it here). The application process that takes about 15 days and costs about $250 for 10 titles.
  5. Marketing. Some authors will say, "What marketing?" For mega-star authors, publishers have to spend a ton on marketing to recoup their advance. Authors who don't get advances won't expect much marketing and will end up doing a lot of the work themselves, which wouldn't be so bad if they were getting 30%, rather than 10%.
  6. Brand. An author may realistically know that the publisher won't do much marketing and yet still want a brand-name publisher. The reason is partly to feel good: "Wow, I am a real author now." But it is also a rational calculation. Which is better, selling 100 books and keeping 30% or selling 300 books and keep 10%? That's right: it is about the same. Does a brand-name publisher increase sales three times?
  7. Retailer shelf-space. Publishers take a big risk on their "sale or return" policy with major retailers. So, you might get retail shelf space, but that is changing, as we will see below.
  8. Amazon "shelf space". This is unlimited, so your publisher will get you in here. But any publisher will get its authors in there. Technically, any entity with an ISBN is a publisher.

If any entity with an ISBN is a publisher, then authors could act as their own publishers. Or we could see cooperative publishers emerge. Or alternative publishers, such as indie and network publishers, could grow stronger.

But let's consider first how book retailing might evolve.

Next: Retailers, e-book Vendors...

Retailers

Here is a bookstore owner's nightmare. Customer walks in; browses around; has grand old time in this temple of knowledge; peruses a book that costs $27; takes out Kindle and orders it for $17, right there in front of your nose, using your wi-fi connection. Aaagh!

You wake up sweating at 3:00 in the morning.

Have you noticed all of those best-seller books stacked up at the front of your local bookstore? Did the retailer buy them hoping to sell them all? Of course not. They are relying on a variant of the age-old practice of "sale or return." Publisher have agreed to take back unsold ones for credit. As this article on Bloomberg states:

"Returns date back to the Depression, when publishers implemented the practice as a way to ensure that bookstores would continue stocking new books."

Now that we are in a major recession, or micro-depression, or whatever we're calling it these days, surely this practice will continue. Well, probably not. Digitization, whether via e-book or print on demand, makes it unnecessary. And publishers simply cannot sustain it. Approximately 25% of their books are being returned. Think of what that does to their profit margins.

How can retailers survive if they have to decide what to buy based on their forecast of what will sell? The answer is, they can't. No one can forecast fickle consumer taste. With retailer's profit margins being what they are, one small error could lead to an operation's failure.

But they have to stock their shelves with something, right?

Not necessarily. Have you noticed that bookstores are becoming more like coffee shops and coffee shops are becoming more like bookstores? And that both have wi-fi?

Retail bookstores might look more like community hang-out spots in future, with the following:

  • Good (but expensive) coffee and snacks,
  • Free wi-fi,
  • A few best-selling books and DVDs (under the sale or return policy),
  • A way for patrons to order any book in the universe, while taking a cut of the transaction.

This last possibility is not hard to imagine. The customer could have the book delivered to the bookstore if they will be passing by again soon or, for a little extra (plus guilt for the bigger carbon footprint), their home.

These coffee shop/bookstores could even host virtual "Meet the author" sessions on a big screen, with back-channel chats going on via Twitter. And they could host book clubs for both face-to-face meetings and online gatherings.

If the "local printer" model becomes a reality, book delivery would be immediate. We can even imagine digital printers setting up shop in the back of coffee shop/bookstores?

That sounds like fun for readers, authors, and store owners. But for students and the unemployed, the walk to the local library seems all the shorter.

And what about big-box bookstores in malls? Nope. Sell your commercial real estate and big-box retailer stock. That will get ugly.

The E-Book Device War

Today, the Kindle rules, just as the iPhone and iPod have beaten the devices in their product classes. The Kindle is simply better for readers than Sony's device. At least, most people think so, and that is what matters.

This dominance is threatened from two directions:

  1. The Android model. Google has not revealed its long-term plans related to book publishing, but being Google's, its plans will be ambitious and centered on driving traffic to vendors through free content. Because e-book readers are similar as consumer devices to smartphones, Google will likely use the Android platform as leverage to bring all consumer device manufacturers who want a piece of the action on board. Sony and Google are already working together.
  2. The offline/online combo model. We tend to think of book reading as a solitary activity, but that is not how it started, and it is not how you started reading (if you were read to by your parents). The popularity of book clubs proves that it can be a great social activity. It is not hard to imagine some entrepreneur mixing online and offline to create a great social experience, and monetizing it with book purchases. There is no cost to creating the venue for that social experience, but it may be the differentiator.

Network Indie Publishing Model

The traditional publishing industry refers to its alternatives in pejorative terms, such "self-publishing" and "vanity publishing." We prefer indie publishing. Indie movies bypass the big Hollywood studios. Indie music bypasses the big record labels. And indie books bypass the big publishers. We look at how this could play out in more detail later.

Indie publishers already exist, and we may see a lot more. With digitization, the barriers to entry come crashing down. In fact, highly trafficked niche websites could become publishers, because:

  • They draw traffic, which they could use to market books,
  • Their brands are respected, at least within their niches.

A website about food could sell cookery books, a site about cars could sell books about cars, and so on. The steps are relatively simple: get an ISBN, make a deal with a print-on-demand vendor, make a deal with Amazon and Sony, and you're in business. Last but not least, choose good authors.

When all you need is an ISBN to become a publisher and earn 30% or more, why make do earning only 4% to 10% as an Amazon affiliate.

In this new world, we could see the pie fairly evenly divided in three:

  • Author: one-third,
  • Publisher, who also creates traffic and demand through their website: one-third,
  • Printer or e-book service: one-third.
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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/bits_of_destruction_hit_book_publishing_part2.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/bits_of_destruction_hit_book_publishing_part2.php NYT Thu, 16 Jul 2009 15:35:24 -0800 Bernard Lunn
Bits Of Destruction Hit the Book Publishing Business: Part 1 "Bits of destruction" is a phrase Fred Wilson uses to describe the destructive part of "creative destruction" brought on by digitization. We hear a lot about the destruction wrought on the newspaper business. A more interesting and nuanced wave is now hitting the book publishing business. Actually, it is three waves: the digitization of back catalogs, e-books, and print on demand. However this plays out, a lot of people will be affected, but the way in which it will play out is not at all obvious. This is too big a subject for one post, so read this as an introduction to a multi-post investigation.

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]]> Somewhere Between Author and Reader Is Multi-Billion Dollar Market

Data on market size is hard to come by. Albert N. Greco, in his book "The Book Publishing Industry" (the relevant extract of which is available, ironically, on Google Books), pegs the number at $65 billion in 1993. The value is probably higher by now. In any case, it is big.

An author writes a book, and you read it. A lot of money is exchanged between those two actions. Consider the steps an author has had to go through in the past to make a living from writing books:

  1. Find an agent, who takes a cut and finds a...
  2. Publisher, who arranges everything and takes a very big cut and delivers the manuscript to the...
  3. Printer, who takes a cut and delivers the product to the...
  4. Distributor, who takes a cut and delivers the books to the...
  5. Retailers, who sell one to you.

Courtesy of iReaderReview, we have created a very simplistic view of how the pie is currently divided:

  • Author: 10% (This in fact ranges between 8% and 15%, depending on the author's clout -- e.g. Stephen King does better than most. If the author has an agent, the agent's cut comes out of this. It is indeed tough for new authors.)
  • Publisher: 30% (This ranges between 25% and 32%, again depending on the author's clout -- e.g. their percentage is less with Stephen King because the risk is lower too. Note: this is their net revenue, after deducting author royalties and printer fees.)
  • Printer: 10%
  • Distributor: 10%
  • Retailer: 40%

Enter the Dragon: Amazon

Jeff Bezos, who could go down in history as the most driven and talented entrepreneur of the Internet age, shook up this last stage: retail. About a decade ago, people were talking about how retailers were "getting Amazoned." But then a couple of things happened:

  1. Amazon discovered that pick-and-pack distribution through warehouses was almost as expensive as running stores on Main Street.
  2. Because the end product was still a physical object, many people still liked browsing in bookstores.

During all of these bruising battles, the publishers did just fine. The long-tail of online media enabled them to sell more of their back catalog.

So, we know how e-commerce played out. But then along came three more waves.

The Three Big Waves Hitting the Industry

One massive wave crashing down is confusing enough. But when three crash at the same time, even seeing what's going on (let alone predicting how things will play out) becomes really difficult. These three big new waves are:

  1. The digitization of print books by Google Book Search.
  2. Increasing consumer acceptance of e-books, mostly because of the Kindle.
  3. Print on demand.

Wave #1: Google Book Search Archive Digitization

The first wave, Google Book Search, has kicked up a storm of controversy, with some waving lawsuits in the air. Google threw down the gauntlet in classic Google style, threatening every player in the industry. Its initiative has reached an impressive scale:

"On October 28, 2008, Google stated that it had 7 million books searchable through Google Book Search." (Source: Wikipedia)

Google is dealing with three types of books here:

  1. Books in the public domain but no longer in print or easily accessible outside of libraries. These are useful for research and can be downloaded as PDFs. Google has scanned these at considerable cost, and the content does not seem to be a good platform for selling ads, and so we would assume this is not a directly commercial venture. Non-profit initiatives in Europe are doing the same sort thing. No one could really argue with this point.
  2. Books that are out of print but still copyrighted. These were the subject of legal action taken by the Authors' Guild and the Association of American Publishers to protect publishers' revenue from back catalogs and authors' royalty streams. The case was settled in October 2008.
  3. Books that were scanned by 20,000 publishing partners and sent to Google, which restricts how much of any one you can read online. Publishers are using Google in its classic role as a source of traffic. They hope the extracts entice you to buy the books.

But this does not bear on the best-sellers and books that you buy at airports. Google is simply performing its normal role of directing online traffic.

That is where the second wave, Amazon's Kindle, comes in.

Wave #2: E-Books

With the Kindle, Jeff Bezos finally gets rid of those warehouses and delivery trucks. He still works through major publishers. As Steve Jobs did with the iPod and iPhone, Bezos is using a device to extract high rent for digital products delivered through the device.

Alternatives to the Kindle exist, of course. But alternatives to the iPod and iPhone exist, too, and Bezos is betting that his device will exact similar loyalty in consumers, forcing all of the major players to work with Amazon.

So, what does the book publishing revenue pie look like with the Kindle now in the eco-system? Let's look at this from the point of view of authors. That seems a good starting point. Without authors, there would be no readers and thus no value for intermediaries to extract. Well, it turns out that the Authors' Guild (yes, the one that sued Google and got a settlement) has a strong opinion on the Kindle, as its President, Roy Blount, explains in an article in the New York Times.

Blount probably gets good legal advice. He is going after a weak link in Amazon's legal defense, as he explains:

"Serves readers, pays writers: so far, so good. But there's another thing about Kindle 2 -- its heavily marketed text-to-speech function. Kindle 2 can read books aloud. And Kindle 2 is not paying anyone for audio rights."

But this seems like a side issue. The real questions are:

  1. Does the reader get a cheaper product? Well, not yet. But consumers seem to be sending a loud message that e-books should be cheaper.
  2. Will authors get more than the 8 to 15% share of the pie that they currently get? That should be possible, because a few big pie-sharers have been eliminated by the Kindle, namely:
    • Printer: 10%
    • Distributor: 10%
    • Retailer: 40%.
    Unless Amazon is giving a bigger percentage to publishers (which is unlikely, but possible), 60% of the pie is available to be shared between Amazon, publishers, authors, and readers.

Here is an author asking all the right questions. And in the comments, another writer addresses the question of royalties on Kindle sales:

"One-third of the cover price. If Amazon discounts the book, they still pay you one-third of the cover price you submit."

He goes on to explain that authors are paid monthly, and they do not ask for exclusivity and do not get advance royalties. That all sounds fine. You can check the actual terms and conditions on Amazon's Digital Text Platform, and the forums contain other advice.

But note that one-third of the cover price goes to the publisher. That is not the author's cut. So, with the Kindle in the mix, the pie appears to be more like this:

  • Author: 8%
  • Publisher: 33%
  • Printer: 0%
  • Distributor: 0%
  • Retailer: 0%
  • Amazon: 59%

In other words, publishers and authors get no more than they did before, and Amazon takes everyone else's cut. This is very good if you own Amazon stock and quite a worry if you are a printer, distributor, or retailer.

Wave #3: Print on Demand

Not everybody wants to pay $359 for a Kindle, particularly when e-books for it are not significantly cheaper than print versions. Also, most books are not yet available on the Kindle, and many (for example, ones with a lot of high-quality images) are not suitable for the device (at least not the current version).

This is where the third wave, print on demand (POD), comes in.

While printing single copies of books using traditional technology such as letterpress and offset printing was simply never economical, digital printing technology now makes it possible.

POD caters to the new long tail: new books that are not best-sellers. Authors go through one of the POD intermediaries: Lulu and Blurb.

In simple terms, the intermediaries allow you, the author, to sell books one at a time. (You could give your book away for free, but you would still have to pay Lulu or Blurb for printing costs.) The model requires no up-front cost from you and no minimum purchase from the reader. Your print-ready content goes to Lulu or Blurb's printing partners, which print and send the books to readers. The printers are willing to work with these intermediaries because they aggregate demand.

You, the reader, see no difference. You order online, pay by credit card or PayPal, and get the book delivered to your home or office.

This initially caught on in the self-publishing and vanity publishing industry, where books often had no market beyond the author's immediate circle of friends, family, and associates. For a good breakdown of the types of publishers in this industry and what to look out for, see this article.

A lot of publishers specialize in this area, including Epigraph, Xlibris, I-Universe, AuthorHouse, SelfPublishing.com, and BookSurge. But they typically require a minimum order, albeit a small one. Blurb and Lulu have used the Web to take this idea to its extreme: no up-front costs, and books printed one order at a time.

Part 2: Wiping the Muck from Our Crystal Ball

In part 2 of this series tomorrow, we will look at how this could play out for the major players:

  1. Readers: will we all get more choice at better prices? Almost certainly.
  2. Authors: will making a living from writing books be any easier for them? This is important to a lot of people but far from certain.
  3. How will the other players (publishers, printers, distributors, and retailers) evolve to meet the challenges of this new world?
  4. What new intermediary models will emerge, and which players stand to profit from them?

UPDATE: Part 2 of this series is now available. It explores how this could play out in the future, specifically for the major players of book publishing: readers, authors, printers, publishers, retailers, and e-book device vendors.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/bits_of_destruction_hit_book_publishing_part1.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/bits_of_destruction_hit_book_publishing_part1.php NYT Wed, 15 Jul 2009 17:26:18 -0800 Bernard Lunn
Google Book Search Goes Mobile If you spend time on the mobile web, you know there's certainly no shortage of content already available on our phones. What if you're on the run and get a hankering for some classic literature though? Enter the just released Google Book Search Mobile at books.google.com/m.

It's a very handy new version of the site that lets you search through and read in full, 1.5 million books on your phone's browser. Regular Google Book Search users know that these books are all scanned in as images, but for the new mobile version Google has used Optical Character Recognition (OCR) to grab the text on the pages. The whole system works quite well.

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]]> googlebooks.jpgThe OCR isn't perfect, but with a tap on your screen you can view the original image corresponding to a paragraph of text. I'm not a regular e-book reader, so I'm not sure how well the very simple display of Google Books for Mobile will work for extended reading sessions, but I'll be giving it a try.

After spending a few minutes perusing the political science section I found a number of interesting titles that I've bookmarked. The business and economics section is a charming selection of very old books. You have to remember that only works old enough to be in the public domain can be viewed in full for free, but if you can accept that then there's lots of fun to be had. You can also read very old magazines. On your phone!

Check out the Google Book Search blog for more details.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_book_search_goes_mobile.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_book_search_goes_mobile.php Mobile Services Thu, 05 Feb 2009 09:47:54 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick
Magazines Come to Google Book Search google_books_logo.pngGoogle today announced that it is adding magazines to its lineup for Google Book Search. These magazines include publications like Popular Science and New York Magazine, but also more obscure publications like the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists. In the long run, Google expects to add search results from these magazines to its main Google.com search results.

It is not clear if Google struck a deal with specific publishers to allow for this, but the selection of included magazines still feels a bit uneven and leaves out quite a few well known publications like Time, Newsweek, and Wired.

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]]> For the included magazines, however, this new feature means that you can now get a full view of every edition up to the most current issue, which is definitely a major addition to Book Search and greatly expands the breadth of topics covered by the database. A number of sites already feature a wide range of magazines online, but the legal status of a lot of these sites is rather dubious. Some magazines, like PC Magazine, are also experimenting with online versions of their printed editions.

Google has been adding a lot of content to its databases lately. Just last month, Google also added images from the Time-Life catalog to Image Search and the company also added newspapers to Google Book Search in September.

Overall, this is a great addition to Book Search, even though the selection of magazines is still a bit lacking. We do expect, however, that Google will increase the number of included magazines over time.

book_search_magazines.png

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/magazines_come_to_google_book_search.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/magazines_come_to_google_book_search.php News Tue, 09 Dec 2008 11:40:32 -0800 Frederic Lardinois
The End of Snippet View: Google Settles Lawsuit with Book Publishers google_books_logo.pngGoogle today announced that it has reached a deal with book publishers to settle two copyright lawsuits over potential copyright violations in its Google Book Search product. This $125 million settlement, which still needs approval from a U.S. district court, will be used to establish a Book Rights Registry that will ensure that publishers and authors receive compensation from subscription services and ad revenue. For users of Google Book Search, this settlement will mean that they might soon be able to build an "online bookshelf" and buy licenses to read the full-text of books in Google's index.

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]]> Google will now be able to fade out the 'snippet view' in Google Book Search, which only showed very small amounts of text from a given book. Instead, most books will now allow readers to preview 20% of the book.

Book Rights Registry

According to Google, the Book Rights Registry will also help to address the 'orphan' works problem. For a lot of out-of-print books, it is virtually impossible to establish the current copyright holder. However, given that the Books Registry will also be responsible for distributing the income from licensing and advertising, Google hopes that this will be an incentive for rightsholders to claim their abandoned works.

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Licenses for Libraries

Libraries, universities, and other organizations will also be able to purchase an institutional subscription, which will give users the ability to access the full text of all the titles in the Google Books index. This, depending on the pricing, could turn out to be a revolutionary development for libraries.

Google Books is already changing the way many of us are doing our research, and having access to even more books is only going to move this trend forward even faster.

It is important to note that this settlement only applies to U.S. copyright holders. Users outside of the U.S. will not see any changes to Google Books yet.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/end_of_snippet_view_google_books.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/end_of_snippet_view_google_books.php News Tue, 28 Oct 2008 09:54:25 -0800 Frederic Lardinois
Google Book Search Adds Embeddable Previews google_book_search_logo.jpgGoogle today announced embeddable previews for all books included in Google's Book Search. Developers can now make use of a set of APIs to embed these previews into any site. Google has already signed up a large number of bookstores, libraries, and social book sites for this new service. Amazon, of course, has included book previews on its own site since 2003, but thanks to this new feature of Google Books, any vendor can now add book previews to their sites for free.

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]]> Among the launch partners are various international online bookstores, including Books-A-Million, Blackwell, A1Books, Liberia Norma, and Liveria Cultura. In the U.S., Borders.com, Buy.com, and Powell's Books will start implementing previews in the new few weeks. Various university libraries have also started to add book previews, including the University of Texas and the University of California.

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At its inception, Google Book Search was a controversial idea, not only among book publishers, but also among librarians. A lot of this early resistance is now giving way to a more positive attitude, as the advantages of Book Search become more apparent to most publishers. After all, publishers can decide for themselves how many pages of a given book they want Google to include in the previews, and librarians can now offer their users an easy way to assess the usefulness of a book from the comfort of their homes.

While these previews are still relatively hard to implement for individuals, we expect that developers will quickly create tools that will allow us to embed book previews on blogs or social networks.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_books_embeddable_previews.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_books_embeddable_previews.php Products Mon, 22 Sep 2008 11:10:39 -0800 Frederic Lardinois