Initial settlement Google worked with all parties in both cases at the same time, and in October 2008, had reached an initial settlement agreement in both cases, pending court approval. Also known as the "Google Book Search Settlement Agreement", the terms of this settlement included: • A total of payment from Google to the affected companies and authors: to the rightsholders whose copyrights had allegedly been infringed; for the publishers' legal fees; to the authors' lawyers; and to create a
Book Rights Registry, a form of
copyright collective that would collect revenues from Google and dispense them to the rightsholders. • The settlement gave all authors and publishers a year and half, until June 2010, to submit opt-out requests to Google to either prevent Google from scanning their books in the future or to remove any books already scanned. • For all other books, it allowed Google to continue to scan and incorporate the contents into its search results, though paid to authors and publishers for all copyrighted works for scans it had made before May 2009. • Google was able to engage in one of several revenue models to offer this content to users. All revenue was shared 37% with Google and 63% split between the authors and publishers under this. Authors or publishers had options to limit how their work was used under this model as well.
Settlement criticisms In the US, several organizations who took no part of the settlement, such as the
American Society of Journalists and Authors, criticized the settlement fundamentally. Moreover, the New York book settlement was not restricted to U.S. authors, but relevant to authors of the whole world. This led to objections even on the level of some European governments and critical voices in many European newspapers. The estate of
John Steinbeck argued for and was granted an additional four-month extension for the class to file objections, putting the deadline into October 2009 and with Judge Chin expected to evaluate the settlement in November. American author
Ursula K. Le Guin announced on her website her resignation from the Authors' Guild over the settlement, claiming the leadership of the Guild had "sold us [its members] down the river" and that the settlement threatened "the whole concept of copyright." She launched a petition against the settlement, which was signed by almost 300 authors. Censorship was also raised as a major issue, as respondents argued Google was creating a content management system that could remove material as easily as they could add it, and would have the power to remove books the same way that it is able to remove videos from
YouTube, with no controlling mechanisms outside Google itself. Organizations such as the
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions and the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) fear that pressure from governments and special interest groups could lead to the censorship of certain books and that there is public interest in protecting the scans from being buried behind Google's ranking system. Privacy advocates from EFF and
American Civil Liberties Union also raised concerns that Google would track users of its book services. Privacy advocates want Google to provide privacy assurances comparable to those enjoyed by visitors to traditional libraries. Others have denounced the settlement for neglecting to protect
reader privacy.
Antitrust issues were also raised as Google was a dominant entity in Internet services in the market. Since the settlement agreement covers the previously digitized books and provides a revenue model for future digitization, it "[gives] Google control over the digitizing of virtually all books covered by copyright in the United States." As the license agreement is non-exclusive, it does not necessarily tie publishers to Google's service. In a journal article,
MIT Professor
Jerry A. Hausman and Criterion Economics Chairman J. Gregory Sidak conclude that the service will be unable to exercise market power. Hausman and Sidak believe that Google Book Search should, on net, yield a significant gain in
consumer surplus. Among the objections to the settlement was a "Statement of Interest" from the
United States Department of Justice (DOJ) submitting in September 2009. The DOJ's statement, while acknowledging the settlement was in the right direction, identified possible
antitrust concerns with the current settlement terms, stating "The current settlement proposal would stifle innovation and competition in favor of a monopoly over the access, distribution and pricing of the largest collection of digital books in the world, and would reinforce an already dominant position in search and search advertising." In October 2009, Google countered ongoing criticism by stating that its scanning of books and putting them online would protect the world's cultural heritage; Google co-founder
Sergey Brin stated, "The famous
Library of Alexandria burned three times, in 48 BC, AD 273 and AD 640, as did the
Library of Congress, where a fire in 1851 destroyed two-thirds of the collection. I hope such destruction never happens again, but history would suggest otherwise." This characterization was criticized by Pam Samuelson, UC Berkeley Professor of Law saying
Amended agreement Due to the number of complaints, Google and the litigants withdrew the initial settlement in October 2009 and began reworking its term to address the concerns from these complaints to create what was known as "Settlement 2.0". The amended agreement included several significant changes: limited the scope to foreign books that are registered with the
U.S. Copyright Office or published in the UK, Canada, or Australia, added board members to the Books Rights Registry from the UK, Canada, and Australia, gave the rightsholder the ability to renegotiate the revenue share, gave Google added flexibility in discounting, and created a
fiduciary to hold payments due to
orphan works. If the rightsholder is never ascertained, the funds are distributed
cy-près instead of redistributed among rightsholders, and increased the number of public licenses allowed for a library. The period for class action review and objections was put on an accelerated schedule, with objections to be submitted by January 28, 2010, and fairness hearings on February 18. The Open Book Alliance, which had reviewed the first settlement and prepared a framework it offered to the parties for Settlement 2.0, asserted that the new settlement terms still allowed Google to maintain its monopoly on digital access and distribution of books among other concerns.
Amended agreement rejected On March 22, 2011, Judge Chin issued a ruling on the amended settlement agreement, rejecting it due to concerns on copyright, antitrust, privacy, and international law. Chin's primary reason for blocking the settlement was based on the fact that the amended settlement agreement would "release Google (and others) from liability for certain future acts." From the ruling:
The Wall Street Journal commented on the practical impact of this ruling saying that: Chin urged that the settlement be revised to one whether authors "opt-in" to having their works digitized rather than "opt-out", and arranged for followup status conferences to discuss next steps with all parties. During a July 2011 status conference the parties attempted to "reassure Judge Chin that the negotiations were making real progress," and Judge Chin scheduled another status conference for September 15, urging the parties to come to an acceptable opt-in agreement or face a "tight discovery schedule". By September 2011, Chin established a schedule for a discovery phase for the pending trial to be heard by jury in July 2012 while the parties attempted to continue to find some type of settlement terms. ==District trial==