Justice wants publisher information on Google deal: report

Wed Jun 10, 2009 8:37am EDT
 
[-] Text [+]

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The Justice Department antitrust division has sent at least two publishers the civil equivalent of a subpoena, seeking information on a deal reached with Google (GOOG.O), the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

The class action settlement concerns copyright and gives Google, which has been scanning books, the right to digitize and sell entire libraries.

The Journal said that David Young, chief executive officer of Lagardere SCA's(LAGA.PA) Hachette Book Group, confirmed that the company had received a civil investigative demand, or CID, which is the civil equivalent of a subpoena.

No one was available at Hachette to confirm the report and the journal did not say what Justice wanted to know.

The Journal said it had also reached a second publisher, who also confirmed receiving the CID, but declined to be identified.

Two experts on digitization told Reuters in April that the Justice Department was making inquiries about the settlement.

Google agreed to pay $125 million to create a Book Rights Registry, where authors and publishers may register works and receive compensation from institutional subscriptions of book sales.

The Google plan is to let readers search millions of copyrighted books online, browse passages and purchase copies.

The deal would also allow Google, and no one else, to digitize so-called orphan works. Those books are covered by U.S. copyright law but it is unclear who owns the rights to them.

The deal is being reviewed by a U.S. District Court.

(Reporting by David Lawsky; Editing by Gary Hill)

 

More News

UPDATE 2-U.S. asking about book deal, Google says
Wednesday, 10 Jun 2009 01:08pm EDT 
PRESS DIGEST - New York Times business news - June 10
Wednesday, 10 Jun 2009 02:06am EDT 
PRESS DIGEST - Wall Street Journal - June 10
Wednesday, 10 Jun 2009 01:50am EDT 
G8 encourages US, Europe bank stress tests-Canada
Tuesday, 9 Jun 2009 09:45am EDT 

Featured Broker sponsored link

Editor's Choice

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.   Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

  • Articles
  • Video