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5 Responses

  1. John Merah

    It appears that whoever wrote this post has not really used the Google book site itself.

    Book scanning is a mine field due to intellectual property and copyright concerns. Google partially scans most of the books they make available- unless the books exist in the public domain. Legal eligibility for public domain status in a country like the United States means some seventy-five years aafter the author’s death!

    As far as academic papers are concerned, citations for other papers as found in trade and academic journals are as common as books, and journals are not inventoried in Google books. Respected journals can only reliably be accessed on the internet through university affiliation (one must be a university student or faculty/administration member), or else pay privately for a subscription.

    This happy announcement about Google books- however optimistic and caught up in the rush of momentary happiness- is misleading and needs clarification.

    The internet is still far from being a true library.

    1. akhlis

      I guess so. I mean, it’s too good to be true,seriously! Getting a full access like a real library via the Internet looks like a castle in the cloud, at least for now. I used to get deceived, too. I signed up for some so-called online libraries which offer myriads collections of books,journals and resources. But then I learned I had to purchase some membership fee or (like you said) university affiliation.
      Speaking of copyrights and risks of illegal copying, Indonesians never take it seriously,do they?
      But the idea of scanning books is great, it saves more trees as we don’t have to print them out on sheets of paper. Green idea!

  2. Nyubi

    Mmmm… Not free, but it is a great break trough

  3. Google Purchases ReCaptcha

    [...] Inc. is already behind a major project to digitize books and put them online, mostly by scanning pages and using optical character recognition, or OCR, to [...]

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