Sunday, January 04, 2009THE GOOGLE BOOK SETTLEMENT AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR ONLINE VIDEOI've posted a couple of times about the Google Book Settlement, more from a general interest in intellectual property issues than anything else. The relationship between the settlement's engagement with the publishing industry and its possible application to the world of film are not direct by any means. The Google Book Settlement applies to library collections containing copyrighted but out-of-print works as well as orphan works. But, I did suspect that at some point the issues involved would become relevant to the world of film. (Remember, Google owns YouTube.) Now comes a piece critical about the proposed terms of the settlement from Chris Castle at The Register. He especially takes issue with the proprietary nature of the register Google is creating and the "opt-out" aspect of the permissions process. From the piece: Allowing a content registry to be controlled by a company that also exploits that content creates anticompetitive conditions even without the MFN. Potential competitors will worry that their business depends on an infrastructure controlled by a dominant competitor. So where does film come in? Well, Castle quotes from this piece in The Wall Street Journal Online in which Google's Sergey Brin talks about other possibilities: WSJ: Is establishing a registry for rights holders a model that Google thinks it can replicate in other areas of digital media, like video? Comments Castle: Regulators should care who controls the Google Books registry because it can easily reach out to other content. Google is well on its way to dominating all search and advertising, and now maybe a significant share of online content. Google’s ability to accomplish transparent accounting is definitely in doubt. And he concludes: The plaintiffs got it half right - our business needs a registry. But that registry ought to be independent, and opt-in. If the Google class action settlement is approved, US courts will essentially create the opposite - an opt-out registry controlled by a dominant player with "most favoured nation" price protection. It is a fundamental principle of international law that an author should not be compelled to submit to formalities (such as an opt-out registry) in order to enjoy their rights. Related is this article about Google generally, "Google the Destroyer," by James V. DeLong, special counsel and chairman of the Intellectual Property practice area in the Washington, D.C. office of Kamlet Shepherd & Reichert. While I don't agree with everything in his piece, his discussion of Google's interests in promoting ad-supported content models is interesting: Several ways of financing the creation and distribution of content exist. Consumers can pay directly, either per ticket (a movie) or for a subscription (XM Radio). Ads can be sold, either combined with a payment (magazines) or stand-alone (broadcast TV). Or a distribution company can sell raw access to the network, and let the users worry about the content (telephone). And of course there are hybrids, where basic service is sold cheaply, and premium offerings bundled on top of it (cell phones, plus ringtones). Comments (0) |
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