French politicians have been quite upset about Google’s book scanning project for years. Way back in 2005, government officials announced that Google’s book scanning project was a threat to French culture. Why? Because the fear was that Google would just scan English books, and ignore the French. So, the French government mobilized. Or, rather, spoke as if it was going to mobilize and tossed a pile of money at a bunch of organizations with no real mandate to do anything. As such, the project fell apart.
Of course, the French politicians are still upset about the “threat” of Google and its book scanning, but whereas the original complaint was that French books would get ignored, it seems like the current complaint is that French books won’t be ignored. French President Nicolas Sarkozy, one of the earliest supporters of kicking people off the internet under a “three strikes” regime — despite a history of copyright infringement himself — has spoken out about how France can’t let Google take away French heritage:
“We won’t let ourselves be stripped of our heritage to the benefit of a big company, no matter how friendly, big or American it is.”
I have to admit that I’m really struggling here to understand how Google is “stripping” anyone’s “heritage” in making such works more easily accessible by everyone. In the meantime, as we noted a few months back, it appears that the French National Library agrees with us more than the government, since it signed up to have Google scan its books.
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