Google scanned and saved 80,000 Chinese books without authorization: Lawsuit

Chinese writer sues Google for copyright infringement

PTI | May 27, 2010



A Chinese writer sued the search engine giant Google for illegally digitising her book for online reading and downloading in a Beijing court.

Shanghai based writer Wang Shen, who uses the pseudonym Mian Mian, alleged her copyright on the book, Acid Lover (Yansuan Qingren), was infringed and required a public apology from Google, as well as 61,000 yuan (USD 8,900) in compensation.

Her lawyer, Sun Jingwei, said in court that Google Books scanned and saved the published work for visitors to read and download. Its search results, which displayed parts of the book, are also alleged to have damaged the completeness of the work, state run 'China Daily' reported.

By the end of 2009, Google had scanned and saved about 80,000 Chinese books without the writers' authorisation, it said.

Its proposal to share sales revenue with the owners of the copyrights has repeatedly been declined and no progress has been made on that front, according to the China Written Works Copyright Society (CWWCS).

The two defendants, both based in China, are Google Information Technology (China) and Beijing Guxiang Information Technology Co Ltd, the operator of google.cn

Google faced similar accusations before it moved to Hong Kong following a spate with the Chinese government over censor regulations.

According to legal experts, since a transnational lawsuit takes longer to resolve and it is difficult for the plaintiff, in this case Mian Mian, to obtain evidence to prove Google copied her whole book outside China, the plaintiff sued the search engine provider and operator, instead of the corporation.

Google China spokeswoman Marsha Wang earlier confirmed the corporation had deleted Mian Mian's work shortly after it became aware of the litigation, which cut off the possibility of obtaining further evidence.

The defendants' lawyer, Andy Yang, denied copyright infringement and claimed the two China-based companies "did not scan the pictures and the scanned files were not saved on the defendants' servers".

Mian Mian, who did not appear in court, earlier said her lawsuit is not targeting Google, but intends to show multinational companies that not every Chinese writer is "vulnerable to tricks".

 

Comments

 

Other News

‘The Civil Servant and Super Cop: Modesty, Security and the State in Punjab’

Punjabi Centuries: Tracing Histories of Punjab Edited by Anshu Malhotra Orient BlackSwan, 404 pages, Rs. 2,150

What really happened in ‘The Scam That Shook a Nation’?

The Scam That Shook a Nation By Prakash Patra and Rasheed Kidwai HarperCollins, 276 pages, Rs 399 The 1970s were a

Report of India’s G20 Task Force on Digital Public Infrastructure released

The final ‘Report of India’s G20 Task Force on Digital Public Infrastructure’ by ‘India’s G20 Task Force on Digital Public Infrastructure for Economic Transformation, Financial Inclusion and Development’ was released in New Delhi on Monday. The Task Force was led by the

How the Great War of Mahabharata was actually a world war

Mahabharata: A World War By Gaurang Damani Sanganak Prakashan, 317 pages, Rs 300 Gaurang Damani, a Mumbai-based el

Budget expectations, from job creation to tax reforms…

With the return of the NDA to power in the recently concluded Lok Sabha elections, all eyes are now on finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s full budget for the FY 2024-25. The interim budget presented in February was a typical vote-on-accounts, allowing the outgoing government to manage expenses in

How to transform rural landscapes, design 5G intelligent villages

Futuristic technologies such as 5G are already here. While urban users are reaping their benefits, these technologies also have a potential to transform rural areas. How to unleash that potential is the question. That was the focus of a workshop – “Transforming Rural Landscape:

Visionary Talk: Amitabh Gupta, Pune Police Commissioner with Kailashnath Adhikari, MD, Governance Now


Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter