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December 13, 2005
HarperCollins starts its own little island
HarperCollins deserves some praise for pushing to make its books widely accessible online, but I think a lot depends on how HarperCollins decides to implement this program. The danger here is that dozens of publishers follow HarperCollins' lead and all set up their own digital fiefdoms with different standards and different rules (and different pricing schemes if publishers decide to charge.) Depending on how well integrated these publisher sites are with Google search (read: how much power publishers decide to let Google have), finding and using these digitized books could become unnecessarily time-consuming. However, if HarperCollins decides to stay closely integrated with Google Book Search, retaining control in a way that is invisible to the reader, then the likelihood of a cumbersome, unnecessarily complex system arising is diminished. I think readers benefit a lot from a system that is unified.
Reaction has been mostly positive - primarily because HarperCollins' rhetoric has been about "openness":
- Prometheus 6 thinks HarperCollins is approaching this the right way.
- Booksquare applauds the move.
- Sarah at GalleyCat is looking forward to getting her hands on the HarperCollins archives.
- C. Max Magee @ 12:25 PM ~ comments: 0 ~ Links to this post
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