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lib.jpgThis is from Bookseller.com:

Three American library associations have reiterated their support for the Google Book Settlement but stressed that it needs to balance pricing and access when selling institutional subscriptions.

The American Library Association (ALA), the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) and the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) have sent a letter to William Cavanaugh, deputy assistant attorney general of the US Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division.

In the letter, the associations said that implementation of the settlement, which allows US Google users to search and preview seven million scanned titles with an option to buy, needs to be monitored “closely”. It added that particular attention needed to be drawn to the pricing of institutional subscriptions for libraries and selection of the Books Rights Registry board members. The registry is the independent body that will distribute revenue from the Google Book Search programme to rights holders.

The organisations added: “With an absence of competition for the proposed services, the settlement could compromise fundamental library values such as equity of access to information, patron privacy and intellectual freedom, according to the library associations who filed comments with the presiding judge on behalf of libraries and the public interest.”

 
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