Google's Near Monopoly on Internet Access to Articles and Books Raises Concerns. By Gregory M. Lamb, CSMonitor, July 11, 2008. "Should a single company be left in charge of putting all of the world's books online? An impressive list of world-class libraries and book publishers don't seem to mind. In 2004, they signed on as partners with Google, the Internet search and advertising colossus based in Mountain View, Calif. Yet some observers have strong concerns about Google Book Search and how the collected thinking of human history will be accessed in the future. Those anxieties rose late last month when Microsoft announced that it was withdrawing from a rival book-scanning project headed by the nonprofit Internet Archive (archive.org). About 750,000 books and 80 million journal articles scanned by Microsoft were removed from its servers, but many remain accessible elsewhere, including on servers maintained by the Internet Archive, which has about 440,000 books online... The sudden shift also showed how vulnerable a digitizing project is when it relies on a for-profit company, says Brewster Kahle, executive director of the Internet Archive. ... 'I wouldn't say Google is 100 percent of the digital book world, but it's getting near 90 percent,' says Siva Vaidhyanathan, a cultural historian and media scholar at the University of Virginia, who writes a blog called The Googlization of Everything."
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