The fight against a legal settlement that would give Google Inc the digital rights to millions of copyrighted books is starting to resemble a heavyweight brawl in the library.
Microsoft Corp, Yahoo Inc and Amazon.com Inc are joining a coalition that hopes to rally opposition to Google’s digital book ambitions and ultimately persuade a federal judge to block or revise the Internet search leader’s plans.
The group, to be called the Open Book Alliance, is being put together by the Internet Archive, a longtime critic of Google’s crusade to make digital copies of as many printed books as possible.
A growing number of critics already have filed objections to Google’s book settlement, but none have the clout that the Open Book Alliance figures to wield with three of the world’s best-known technology companies on board.
Peter Brantley, the Internet Archive’s director of access, provided some of the details about the alliance’s members and objectives in a Thursday interview. Both Microsoft and Yahoo have confirmed their intention to join the alliance. Amazon declined to comment because the group hasn’t been formally announced yet. The Open Book Alliance also will include an assortment of nonprofit groups.
Among other things, the alliance will try to persuade the US Justice Department that Google’s broad settlement with authors and publishers could undermine competition in the digital book market just as more consumers are gravitating toward electronic readers like Amazon.com’s Kindle.
In a bit of irony, the alliance is working closely with Gary Reback, a Silicon Valley lawyer who helped convince the Justice Department to file an antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft that tormented the software maker during the late 1990s. Reback didn’t respond to a message left late on Thursday.
The Justice Department already is assessing the possible fallout from Google’s book settlement, which is scheduled to be reviewed by US District Judge Denny Chin in an Oct. 7 court hearing in New York.
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