Tag Archives: Google

Amazon Launches Kindle In France

Online retailing giant Amazon has launched the Kindle Device and ebook store in France.

The newest Kindle eInk reader is available there for €99 but the company does not seem to have made the new touch screen Kindles or the Kindle Fire available to French customers.

The launch marks the fourth distinct Kindle store with stores having opened previous in Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Yesterday Google launched its own ebook service in the United Kingdom and last week Apple finally rolled out its iBooks service to Ireland and several other European markets.

Briefly Noted | Booksellers Alter App Sales – WSJ.com

Amazon and Barnes & Noble shoppers will be able to access their digital titles via the Kindle and Nook apps on their Apple devices, but in order to buy new titles, they will have to use the Safari Web browser and visit either www.amazon.com/kindlestore or www.nookbooks.com.

In February, Apple set new terms for companies wanting to sell digital content via its devices. It said such companies had to make their content available for sale via an app rather than through a link within the app to an outside website. As part of the change, Apple also said it would take 30% of each sale.

via Booksellers Alter App Sales – WSJ.com.

Briefly Noted | What The Book Business Will Be Talking About This Week | paidContent

After this week, we should know a lot more about how much traction Google is getting in its books business. Tom Turvey, Google Books Director of Strategic Partnerships, will be moderating a panel of publishing executives on the future of e-books (expect a lot of questions on how much of their business is now digital, as well as questions about the success of new business models they’re experimenting with). In another panel, “The Three Rs of Google eBooks: Reading, Regions and Retailing,” Google Books Director of Product Management Scott Dougall will provide info on what the company has learned about Google eBookstore users—including the devices they’re using, what they’re reading, and where they live.

via What The Book Business Will Be Talking About This Week | paidContent.

Briefly Noted | Google Sued by French Publishers for $14 Million Over Books – Bloomberg

Google Inc. GOOG was sued for 9.8 million euros $14 million by three French publishers who said the search-engine company scanned books without permission.

Editions Albin Michel SA, Editions Gallimard SA and Flammarion claimed Google has scanned 9,797 copyright-protected works for its digital library. The publishers are seeking compensation of 10,000 euros per book, Google said today.

via Google Sued by French Publishers for $14 Million Over Books – Bloomberg.

Judge Rejects Google Book Settlement

The proposed Google Book Settlement has been rejected by Judge Chin in the United States District Court in the Southern District Of New York.

Having waited many months for a decision from the Judge, he did not leave the reader too long in doubt about his ruling saying in the second and third sentences of his judgement, ‘The question presented is whether the ASA is fair, adequate, and reasonable. I conclude that it is not.’

The ruling throws into doubt the future of the settlement though Judge Chin also pointed to a possible solution to the ruling saying, ‘As the United States and other objectors have noted, many of the concerns raised in the objections would be ameliorated if the ASA were converted from an ‘opt-out’ settlement to an ‘opt-in’ settlement. (See, e.q., DOJ SO1 23, ECF No. 922; Internet Archive Mem. 10, ECF No. 811). I urge the parties to consider revising the ASA accordingly.’

The settlement was negotiated following a decision by authors and publishers to sue Google for its decision to scan books without permission. It has seen a number of changes since it was originally proposed and has generated significant discussion and disagreement since it was first proposed.

The full ruling can be found here.

Briefly Noted | With One Pass, Google Elbows Apple and Woos Publishers – WSJ.com

Google’s new One Pass service allows consumers to use one account to pay for access to multiple publications on the Web and across a range of mobile devices.

The move comes one day after Apple laid out a subscription service for content sold through its iPhone and iPad devices, an offering that some publishers greeted skeptically. Apple would take a 30% cut on sales of subscriptions in its iTunes App Store.

via With One Pass, Google Elbows Apple and Woos Publishers – WSJ.com.

Briefly Noted | UK Indie Booksellers Motivated to Start Selling E-books | Publishing Perspectives

In the UK, Streeter feels that wholesalers have an important role to play, performing the back office download function and helping independents improve their websites and make them transactional. At the moment, there is a huge difference in the standard of websites among UK independents, with many of them being out-of-date or non-transactional. “After that, the next step is Google e-books,” she added. “And when that launches in the UK we want to put on a presentation for independents. At the Bookseller’s Association we have been having lots of conversations with Google and those conversations will continue. It is all about marketing this properly.

“I have never been asked for an e-book in the shop myself, but I do know customers who have Kindles. I think booksellers need to tell these customers that that is a locked-in system –- that’s a conversation they need to have.”

via UK Indie Booksellers Motivated to Start Selling E-books | Publishing Perspectives.

Google Ebooks Launches In United States

Google has launched its ebook offering in the USA. The service, previously called Google Editions, has been renamed Google Ebooks.

Google Ebooks promotes a vision of cloud based storage of ebooks that allows the user to read a purchased book on any device with an internet connection. The platform allows synching of books across multiple devices.

The site offers downloadable apps for Android and Apple devices as well as B&N’s Nook and Sony’s Reader devices. For now, these apps are not available outside of the US (unless readers have US iTunes or other app store accounts).

It offers readers a range of free public domain and free view titles and a selection of new releases and in copyright works. The company claims to have some ’3 million free ebooks and hundreds of thousands of titles that are ready for purchase.’

The titles on offer are a mix of those scanned as part of Google’s digitization program and title submitted by publishers who are members of Google’s partner program.

For now, only US readers can buy New York Times Bestsellers and other recent paid titles, but those outside of the US have to the free and public domain titles.

Google aims to launch Google ebooks outside of the USA in the first quarter of 2011 though as with Apple’s iBookstore, this may mean that the UK and other territories get access to paid for titles on a rolling schedule while other territories have access to only the free titles.

Google's 130m book count – and ours



Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Google’s 130m book count – and ours” was written by Richard Lea, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 9th August 2010 10.09 UTC

So Google have come up with a number, and it’s big. Thanks to the blistering pace of technology, of course, its claim that there are precisely 129,864,880 books in the world will already be just that little bit out of date – but it’s enough to set you thinking. How many of them are any good? How many of them have never been read by anybody other than their author? How many of them are available on the Kindle?

The number itself, naturally, is open to dispute. On the Google Books blog, “software engineer” Leonid Taycher goes into gnarly detail about how they’ve arrived at it, beginning with the question “what is a book?” and going on to investigate issues of duplication, the reliability of sources and the exclusion of “non-books” (microforms, maps, t-shirts with ISBNs – there are around 1,000, apparently). It seems that they’ve given lots of thought to the matter, at any rate, but what we’d like to know is a much more homespun sort of number. How many books can you, personally, put your name to?

Counting the books I’ve got at home is complicated because I’m not there right now, and neither are most of my books (long story), but right here, right now, “filed” on the desk, I’ve got 46 – though I swear that at least three of those have nothing to do with me. In the cupboard across the way I’ve got about another 60, and there are probably a bunch more waiting for me in the post room, so even on this small scale, when we try to come up with a figure, we run into problems. But nevertheless that’s what we want to know: if Google has 130m books, how many do you have?

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

Guest Column: Lapwing and Google

Lapwing LogoLapwing Publications is a poetry press based in Belfast. It was founded by Dennis and Rene Greig in 1988. Since then it has published some of Ireland’s best known authors. IPN contacted them because they have been partners in Google’s Book program for some time. They have kindly agreed to allow us republish this piece by their co-founder Denis Greig.


In the late eighties I laughed at a man in a writers’ group I was associated with. Now I eat my words, everything he spoke about in terms of technical development in regards to books has come to be a reality. Likewise when I applied to the Northern arts council in 1999/2000 to develop the internet use and CD formats, I think they had a bit of a laugh and seemed more interested in what we could provide for ‘young’ people. Well, perhaps to be expected when they still used an old Amstrad dot-matrix printer. Not willing to run a brothel, become a drug dealer or do cars with go-faster stripes I put almost everything to do with technical development on a back burner.

So it was back to the failing conventions. One bookshop keeper informed me that ‘we don’t stock pamphlets’ – that was our main output form then. ‘Odd’ I thought as we chatted beside a mountain of poetry pamphlets. Then there was the hide them under the table trick.

I had a great computer programme but the business of setting up a website was torturous. Yes, with a bottomless pocket of cash I could have got ‘someone’ to do the business.

Then along came Google Booksearch Partners project.

Even in the earlier years, we were attracting hundreds of ‘hits’ a week. That meant up to 500 people a week were browsing our listing. Last year 14,000 plus Lapwing publications were browsed and 56,000 plus pages on Google. That is a lot of people reading a lot of poetry. Some titles have been ‘browsed’ between 1000 and 3000 plus times. And although the number of pages that can be accessed is very limited, the Booksearch has become a ‘virtual library’. Necessary now that the barbarians are threatening to close libraries in the UK and the Blackening North.

The Google site also links to major booksellers and resellers. What’s more, it is universally available, it is a worldwide shop window.

Britain and Ireland are feeling the effects of cultural changes, possibly linked or related in GB’s case to the deconstruction of education for the less wealthy children and young people. Related to that is the rise of commercialism where it is a case of quantity counts instead of ‘quality’. Oh yes, the dumb and ghost-written stuff is well produced as machine-made ‘products’ but the literary commercial culture seems to be all about cooks, crooks, tarts and old farts bumping up their pension plans. So ‘kiss and tell’ will sell. Fine, as long as it lasts. The problem is one of confusing public opinion with ‘taste’. Then again a recent study suggests that 5% of poets actually buy poetry books and of those 65% tend to be Heaney titles followed by Simon Armitage. I wonder how ‘they’ worked that out.

However, some 800 bookshops closed in the UK last year alone. Stalinist central buying and high discount levels demanded worked both for and against publishers. For, when people happily added gunge to their lifestyle bric-a-brac, against when the public stopped or cut buying. Why bother when the remainder shops will have the £20 stodge a a few quid a copy. The other pressure has been the simple cost of occupancy. Employers can impose impoverishing regimes on their staff but when it comes to rents, rates and other forms of official robbery, they have no option but to put up or close up. Hughes & Hughes in Ireland seem to have fallen foul of a complex of problems related to occupancy. A certain chainstore in Britain – with an Irish presence – seems to be suffering as well and if rents escalate some places will become unviable.

With Google, the shop window is lit up 24-7 as the cliché goes.

As it is, poetry is a non-commercial venture. Almost 100 years ago, Ezra Pound helped print his own 200 copy edition of Il Lume Spento in Italy. Des O’Grady did likewise!

The market saturation point in Ireland is about 200 to 300 copies and usually a lot less. So, without state grant aid, there would be a lot less published. Granted the overseas market – not Europe I must add – may subsidise the home based business. Gains can be made by farming out work to India and China. Still, it is essential that traditonal publishers continue to be subsidised even if it means the perceived great and good get the lion’s share – at least it is a form of tokenism, a veneer on the masses who don’t read poetry or ‘fine’ literature and the embellishment of icons emerging poets may aspire to emulate.

Distribution tends to be in a few hands so independent bookshops throughout Ireland cannot obtain what distributors do not have on their shelves. The only other alternative is to use the internet to acquire books on order from customers. Yes, the big shops can do that and yes, a Kindle or iPod ebook reader can give access to a load of titles. That is another kind of distribution, the ins and out of which are still wriggling on the floor. Postage and distribution costs are high, so Lapwng offers titles that don’t need toys for boys and girls, simple PDF files and each title at a fraction of hard copy prices.

Finally, which is only a deferred finality, along came freewebs and Adam Rudden, a bright and brilliant young man who put together my attempt at site building, trimmed and polished and continues to develop the Lapwing ‘presence’. He also is making the best use of Google. The changes around us are happening whilst we sleep, ‘measure our lives with coffee spoons’ to paraphrase T.S.Eliot. In the meantime, in the parallel universe of corporate literary culture, retrenchment and a closing of doors is very evident by the cuts in ‘arts’ budgets and the continued Philistine philosophy around literature, if it doesn’t sell dump it. That is what is happening with ‘fine’ literature. It is not a matter of state organisations flooding the ‘industry’ with cash – it is obvious that small publishers and para-literary publications will be ignored. It would be simply a case of the same old song and same old singer blinged up a bit for the modern market. It will certainly not be a case of liberty, equality and fraternity for the establishment’s barricades are well and truly up already.

Dennis Greig