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Google Launching E-Book Store Next Year

Google Launching E-Book Store Next YearGoogle is finally trying to make some money from its controversial Google Books project. Sometime early next year, Google Editions will be launched as an outlet for e-books, thanks to deals the search giant has struck with publishers.

Right out of the box, Google will offer some 500,000 books, both direct to consumers and though retail channels like Amazon.com and BarnesandNoble.com. Of course, as with everything Google does, the company will host the electronic texts on its own servers, make them searchable, allow customers to access them from almost any Web-capable device, and provide the books in an open format that can be loaded onto any e-book reader. That openness is seen as a direct challenge to the dominance of Amazon and the walled garden that is its Kindle ecosystem.

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Google, Web

Microsoft, Amazon, and Yahoo! Join Coalition Against Google Books

Last October, Google agreed to pay a $125 million settlement to the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers in order to continue its digital publishing venture, Google Books. But the move still has to meet court approval. The Los Angeles Times reports that, as the window of opportunity to block the agreement closes -- there's a September 4th deadline for comments -- Microsoft, Yahoo! and Amazon have joined the soon-to-be-announced Open Book Alliance, an opposition group created by the non-profit Internet Archive.

If the agreement is approved, Google will be able to offer electronic versions of millions of out-of-print books, with 70-percent of the proceeds from sales going to authors and publishers. Google, meanwhile, would keep the remaining 30-percent. Peter Brantley, a member of the coalition told the L.A. Times that the alliance's concerns focus on Google Books's threat to competitiveness. "Google is trying to monopolise the library system," Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle told BBC News. He also said, "If this deal goes ahead, they're making a real shot at being 'the' library and the only library." [From: The Los Angeles Times, BBC, and Engadget]

Sony Reader Gets 500,000 New Book Titles From Google


It's a good time to be a Sony Reader owner.

Google has just made 500,000 titles from its massive public-domain book collection accessible to users of Sony's popular e-book reader. This is the first time Google has made these resources available to such a device, effectively pushing Sony's Reader past Amazon's Kindle (which offers about 240,000 titles) in terms of books available for the device.

All of the public-domain titles were published before 1923, but include many classics of fiction and non-fiction. It's a big day for literature lovers everywhere, since you can now finally unfetter H.P. Lovecraft's "The Call of Cthulhu" from the Google-hosted PDF version and take it with you in the new Electronic Publication Format (EPUB). Your move, Amazon. [From: thestreet]


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