google

22 Aug

Launch of LibreDigital Warehouse

in google, open access

Open Access News notes the start of a new book search service by commercial publishers similar to Google Books. From the article,

Patricia Schroeder, president of the Association of American Publishers, said LibreDigital Warehouse would be a way to help authors, distributors and independent booksellers market their titles, while allowing publishers to maintain presentation quality and copyright control.

"Publishers, unlike the popular portrayal of them, have been digitizing their content for a very long time," said Schroeder. "They're very much ready for this. Obviously, they're very happy to work with people and with search engines that respect their copyright."

Yeah, right. I don't think a warm and fuzzy feeling of working with friends is motivating this. By establishing their own service, publishers may hope to diffuse one of the four fair use factors. I wouldn't be surprised to see them claim that any book in their service which is also in Google's might discourage users from accessing their service, ultimately affecting their ability to sell full access and other services. Smart move. Touché to the publishers!

14 Aug

How Googling Can Get You Foogled: Google Goes RIAA On Us

in google, trademarks

Well...Guess what. You know how all those curmudgeons who don't know the first thing about linguistics like to talk about the degeneration of our language? How all those kids running around "googling" things are butcherating it? Well, looks like they might have some legal reinforcement now: Everybody's pet rock company is now sending C&Ds to publishers asking them to stop "googling" things. Why? Because it's obviously a violation of Google's trademark. They don't want to be xeroxed into generic oblivion, for God (TM)'s sake. Looks like the little honeymoon with Google as a company run by actual human beings (TM) is over, folks. Now he's fat and drinking too much beer. Ew. Stinky Google.

08 Jul

Patch writer's dee-lite?

in composition, documentation, google, plagiarism

Recently introduced to Google Notebook (by ever-on-the-leading-edge Platypus Matt), I merrily commenced using it to grab stuff off the web for a piece I'm researching. With a plagiarism case from the just completed summer session fresh in my mind, it suddenly hit me that Google Notebook, released in May this year, is cut-and-paste with benefits! Using, it, you mime the actions of patch writers, but with a key difference, because Notebook automatically inserts a source link, even if you're only highlighting and pasting a single paragraph out of a page. Makes you wonder how many students across the country next Fall will be turning in papers put together with its help. Because, after all, it solves a major problem in one fell swoop: Your teacher might fault you for simply stitching paragraphs together, but YOU'VE CITED THEM--and you didn't even have to worry about adding the URLs yourself!

Because of my journalistic background, plagiarism has always been my line in the sand. In eight years teaching composition, I've failed at least half a dozen students--for the course--for word theft. I'm a big believer in talking about real word consequences, per Verity Brown and Mark Howell. And, yes, I know I'm antedulvian: I've read Rebecca Moore Howard, too.

12 Jun

Google Browser Sync Extension

in browsers, google

Ars Technica reported last week that Google released the Google Browser Sync Extension for Firefox. I've had a chance to use this for the past couple of days now, and this is a must have for anyone who has multiple computers and uses Firefox regularly. It's now second on my list behind the Web Developer Extension.

You must have a Gmail account. Once you install the extension, Google will then sync a variety of browser data (you choose which one's to sync): cookies, passwords, bookmarks, history, tabs and windows.

It's been great having my browser on my desktop and laptop in sync with each other. Make sure you try it :-)