Publishing Houses Think That Expensive, Fragmented And Limited Book Search Is Better Than Letting Google And Amazon Do It?
from the please-explain dept
Book publishers have been pretty vocal in their dislike for Google's plan to scan books and make them searchable via a great big electronic card catalog -- claiming that this somehow is a misuse of their content. That seems like a stretch, since Google is never making the complete content of the book available (just small snippets) and are basically no different than creating an index (sort of like what they do for the web). It seems quite likely that Google's service would then help to sell more books by making them easier to find -- a claim supported by a few publishers who actually understood the concept and realized that Google's book search is a good thing. Other publishers haven't been so quick to figure this out. HarperCollins decided to scan its own damn books, but are doing so with quite a lot of limitations.Now Random House has announced that it, too, is making excerpts of books available online -- but it's just excerpts and of just a few books. The question, really, is why bother? All these publishers are creating limited, expensive, fragmented searches for books, when Google (and others such as Yahoo and Amazon) are more than willing to do the work for them, while bringing all the offerings together. There are very, very few people in this world who think about books in terms of who published them. No one wants to know that they need to go to a certain place to search for a Random House book and another for a HarperCollins book. Instead, let the search engines do the work (and spend the money), and the search engines will bring in the people and help drive sales. Building separate, fragmented book searches hardly seems like a compelling or cost-effective plan.
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Ugh
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typo
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wow
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LOL!
Somewhere in Google's site, it says something along the lines of "we pride ourselves on making your visit as short as possible". Google isn't about moving huge amounts of information. It's about FINDING the information you want on the Internet and then going to get it! Meanwhile, stupid people will continue to lose revenue as they resist Google's efforts to index the world.
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It's not about cluelessness
They don't want Google to do this because they know Google will put ads on those pages and make money off it, and they believe that money should be theirs. And even though this may provide more revenue for them, they would rather forgo that revenue if accepting it would mean that Google would also be making money.
It amazes me how businesses, especially content producers, are so consistantly anti-captialistic.
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Old business model - Same as record companies
Once distribution costs are neglegable all they are are marketeers.
A good way to bring distribution costs down would be to scan the books in and make them available electronically. The first step in creating a search tool.
The search tool reduces publishing houses stronghold, which is the reason they are fighting it.
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Loss of BRAND
Follow the money.
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Random approach?
You expected a logical, methodical approach from a company named random? ;-)
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Expensive, fragile, limited...IF the search engine
Sorry, but for once I think Techdirt is being clueless--dig a little deeper into what's going on before posting to this thread.
It is NOT an advantage for us as readers and web users to have Google and other search engines building up competing stockpiles of page images for recent books--read Tim O'Reilly's post "Book Search Should Work Like Web Search" for a full take on it. (http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2006/12/book_search_sho.html)
Here's one of his key points: "Book search engines ought to search publishers' content repositories, rather than trying to create their own repository for works that are already in electronic format. Search engines should be switchboards, not repositories."
If Random House and HarperCollins want to put stuff online themselves, and have all the search engines come and search it, why is that a bad model?
The real question is when will Google include these results in their Book Search results? When can Google and the others make their Book Searches flexible enough to allow publishers to set up alternate ways of providing content like this?
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Re: Expensive, fragile, limited...IF the search en
Leave cluelessness behind, did you actually read the article? It is a bad model because it makes you go to all the different search engines of many publishing houses that you don't even know about it. Of course they get to control it, but what good does it do if no one uses it? You should explain your thinking on how 15 unknown book searches are better than one very well known.
It's up to the copyright owner to determine how to best monetize content, not up to a third party.
Ok, makes sense, so you are supporting publishing houses' choice of pursuing the WORST way of monetizing content by making their content difficult to search. Brilliant.
I think apart from book sales, there's the quote finding function that is often overlooked. If people could look to google to verify a quote then they would never buy a book for that purpose. That to me is a strong argument against fair use.
That's plain idiotic. If people want to verify a quote they won't buy a book, they will go to one of the many quotation websites or simply paraphrase to the best of their ability. Are you implying that someone bought Shakespeare's books to never read anything but line 12 of 2nd act? This is a non-issue.
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Re: quotes
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Google Search and Full Text
I also searched for another subject the other night, found the book, read the excerpt and have it on my to buy list at Amazon.
It works, increases access and sales. The publishers should realize this.
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I'm not going to go - from publisher to publisher trying to find a particular book.
Let's say I want 'Oliver Twist'.
Do I need to go to 15+ publisher's sites to find it? Or maybe I just know a particular quote in a book, etc.. Or maybe an author who has published under a variety of companies.
No, lol - it's like looking for Music - do you to go all the various Recording Studios/Music Marketer's pages?
Personally, I'm not motivated by a publisher's profits, nor am I particularly biased towards one publisher. So I really could careless who publishes a book. But I know this much, I'll google search for it. If I don't manage to find it, maybe I'll just search for something else. All depends on how much interest I have in a particular novel.
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I've seen sites with varying degrees of search engine success. Some are good - some just flat out suck.
So I guess that works - assuming their search engine works well.... If not, who knows I guess.
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I think apart from book sales, there's the quote finding function that is often overlooked. If people could look to google to verify a quote then they would never buy a book for that purpose. That to me is a strong argument against fair use.
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Re:
Much of the the publishing industry is comprised of Luddites. The idea that they would give up control of even a fraction of their content is why the industry is heading down. All of publishing is suffering, regardless of what you hear about big best sellers. The trade side is in serious trouble.
I'd be hard-pressed to believe that finding a quote and potentially using it out of context would have very little impact on sales. Most sales managers would agree that exposing the product to the customer converts them to a buyer.
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Re:
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Not just snippets
It's not clear to me what the ultimate financial impact might be on authors, but Google and Amazon have both posted books without obtaining permission from the rights holder. Sometimes this is the publisher, sometimes it's the author. As an author, I just wish this didn't feel like Amazon and Google saying they don't care about working with the rights holders or authors, to assess the impact or, in fact, provide only a snippet.
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Re: Not just snippets
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Re: Not just snippets
As to the ultimate financial impact? Well, when I type in either your name or a title of one of your books, say, A Darker Crimson, I get nothing in Google Books other than a option to search in a library catalog. Some people may just give up and find a book by another author - perhaps they will end up buying one of the books that shows up when your name or book titles is used as a search term. No sale for you. Now, sure, some people may go over to Amazon.com, but why shouldn't they be able to do that right from Google? Why are old media people so afraid of Google?
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Search engine of your choice is what I'm for
You should explain your thinking on how 15 unknown book searches are better than one very well known.
I'm not suggesting that web users visit 15 different publisher sites to search separately on each for the book they need.
I'm suggesting that users go to Google (or Amazon, or Windows Live Book Search, or any other familiar search engine that they know) and put in their search terms and get (ta da) links that jump them to the content on the publisher sites.
This is how search engines work for everything else online. They crawl external sites and push users to those sites. Why do these search engines want to break that model and store page images themselves if the book is available online at a publisher site?
Only in a world where search engines like Google and Microsoft Live decide to maintain independent competing silos of book images would you ever need to search on more than one search engine for a book. Right now, if you don't find it in Google Book Search, you think..."hmmm, guess I'll try Amazon Search-Inside-the-Book...."
If both Amazon and Google would give up storing page images of recent books, and instead point to the place the publisher provides searchable content, then the same content would be available no matter where you searched.
(And, yes, I know so far there's not a lot available at the Random House and HarperCollins libraries--but they have started, and if search engines would agree to crawl and include the results in their book searches, these publishers would have incentive to put up a whole lot more titles.)
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Re: Search engine of your choice is what I'm for
1) all publishers would use a common (or very similar) database structure to store their index of the book contents and then allow search engines to query their databases but some how limit this access to just search engines.
or
2) post the entire contains of every book as separate web pages so that the contents could be indexed by the search engines. Which would of course defeat their attempts to not have the whole book available to be read on-line.
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Re: Search engine of your choice is what I'm for
Publishing houses are trying to make sure that Google has no access and control to any piece of information that belongs to them. They want to be the only ones granting access, hence the 15 different unknown book searches. That makes your idea implausible for their intensive purposes. And again, what is the benefit of doing all that work, creating your own databases, upkeeping them and trying to make sure that Google can scour them when they can just sit on their hands and see Google do it ALL for them?
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I think you're all wrong
The reason I wouldn't have purchased them isn't that I could read and use them without doing so. It's because I could have identified those books as being, well, garbage. Even if all I'd had were unreadable thumbnails of the page I could have excluded a full third of the books I purchased.
That's why publishers don't want their books open to full search. Art book with no color plates, programming examples with no code, step-by-step with no illustrations, 101 tips and none apply to you... they dump that junk on us edition after edition, year after year, all because we can't find the best book - so we get stuck buying multiple ones.
Their industry revolves around selling us the next new book regardless of whether it's worth the paper it's printed on and they can't risk us discovering a book's (lack of) worth before we've purchased it.
Now if they sold better books or provided more value for the buck they'd gain sales and if you look at the publishers embracing previews and searches you'll see they are providing one or the other.
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However...
So, it is indeed a battle over content control, but Google and the publishers are not necessarily at opposite sides of the pitch.
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Book Publishers Need a Wake Up Call
Great post. You've only scratched the surface of the problem publishers have. As a book marketing expert who has placed 33 straight books on the New York Times best-sellers lists, you would be shocked by the stupidity and inane behavior of publishers in the book book industry.
I responded to your post over at GrokDotCom
Michael R. Drew
Promote A Book Inc
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publishing my play
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