Apr
5
2009
Sarah Sheard
I have opted out. Nobody right now may be rushing to obtain erights to your out-of-print titles or books published prior to 2009 but this is only temporary. I opted out because I will not surrender my erights in perpetuity for a pittance to Google Corporation. Note that they offer to pay “net” of expenses. Net of expenses is called “monkey points” by writers in the movie business because net of expenses tends to inspire creative accounting on collectors’ parts. Collectors benefit first; writers are paid last. Net means whatever’s left after the Registry has deducted its own (unknown) operating costs. The Registry is not a neutral, altruistic, collection service for writers and publishers. It is the collection arm of the Google Corporation.
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no comments | tags: American Library Association, anti-Trust, compulsory license, Fairness Hearing, Google Corporation, Harvard Law School, monkey points, New York Law School, opted out, proposed Settlement
Apr
5
2009
Sarah Sheard
Bite marks are beginning to collect on The Google Settlement. As writers, publishers and legal beagles chew their way through its 385 pages, the bitter taste of a possible price-fixing monopoly is beginning to spread. I’ll turn the column over now to Lynn Chu, a principal at Writers’ Representatives LLC whose challenge to the proposed Settlement was published in the Wall Street Journal. She sinks a powerful pair of incisors into the Google Corporation’s grabby handy-pandies: Continue reading

no comments | tags: Association of American Publishers, Authors' Guild, Book Rights Registry, BRR, class action, compulsory licensing scheme, individual bargaining, Lynn Chu, opt in, price-fixing monopoly, private contract data, U.S. Copyright Office, University of Michigan library, Writers' Representatives LLC