6

GoogleGoogle is to start charging readers for seeing all of some books it’s indexed. “Publishers will set the prices for their own books and share the revenue with Google,” reports the New York Times. “So far, Google has made only limited excerpts of copyrighted books available to its users.” Yep, that in the same article updating info on the Amazon Kindle—see Robert Nagle’s thoughts.

Catch: If previous speculation bears out, the files will remain on the Google servers and not be available on your machine unless the Save function is allowed. Oh, the fun of e-book museums! Nothing wrong with the browser-based approach as an option, but I’d hate for it to be the only one.

Reminder: I’m all in favor of fair compensation for publishers of copyrighted books, a key point of the TeleRead plan. What will be interesting, in Google’s case, is whether the company in time will charge for access or improved access to public domain books.

And related: Google vs. MyLibrary.com, apparently. Fascinating, isn’t—how summer interns’ work at Google can imperil whole businesses? I doubt that MyLibrary.com will roll over and die, but this isn’t the best news for  it. More than ever, Google is the new Microsoft. (Thanks, Tamas.)

 
6