Official Notification of Authors and Publishers About Google Book Search Copyright Settlement in Progress


NEW YORK, February 11 /PRNewswire/ --

The Court-ordered process of officially notifying authors, publishers,
and other copyright-holders about the landmark Google Book Search
class-action settlement is underway.

Authors and publishers throughout the world are receiving detailed
information about their legal rights and options by email and postal mail. A
Summary Notice is being published in 218 countries and 72 languages, which
complements the mailed notice program. Class members should visit
http://www.googlebooksettlement.com for complete information, including the
Notice of Class Action Settlement, and key dates.

The Authors Guild, the Association of American Publishers, and Google
announced the proposed settlement in late October 2008. The settlement, if
Court-approved, will authorize Google to scan in copyright Books and Inserts
in the United States, maintain an electronic database of Books, and make 
various uses of the Books as specified in the settlement. For out-of-print 
Books and, if permitted by Rightsholders of in-print Books, Google will be 
able to sell access to individual Books and institutional subscriptions to the 
database, place advertisements on any page dedicated to a Book, and make other 
commercial uses of Books. At any time, Rightsholders can change instructions 
to Google regarding any of those uses. Through a Book Rights Registry 
("Registry") established by the settlement, Google will pay Rightsholders 
63% of all revenues from these uses. The settlement also provides for cash 
payments to Rightsholders of Books and Inserts that Google scans prior to 
May 5, 2009.

Class members' rights may be affected by the settlement even if they do
not act. Those who wish to opt out of or object to the settlement must do so
by May 5, 2009. Claims for cash payments for Books and Inserts scanned by May
5, 2009 must be filed by January 5, 2010. The U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York will consider whether to grant final approval
of the settlement at a hearing on June 11, 2009.

Complete information about the settlement is available at
http://www.googlebooksettlement.com, which is available in 36 languages.

© PR Newswire Association LLC.

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