Microsoft
is taking on
Google, and
book publishers worldwide, by introducing its own book search engine.
Windows
Live Book Search is currently available to US surfers and includes
collections from the
British
Library,
University
of California and
University
of Toronto.
The service will initially cover non-copyrighted books, but will later be
expanded to include protected works with the publishers' agreements.
"We feel very strongly about copyright. We do not do any mass scanning of
in-copyright works," Danielle Tiedt, general manager of Live Search Selection at
Microsoft, told the
BBC.
"What we are focusing more of our efforts on for live searching is
integrating all of those content types to give users the most relevant results.
"If, for example, it's a search on historical content, chances are the most
authoritative content may be found in a books search."
Google
was sued by the
US
Authors Guild in September 2005 for its
Book
Search, which was accused of widespread copyright infringement at the
expense of the rights of individual writers.
In June this year French publisher
La
Martinière Groupe filed a
lawsuit
against the search giant, alleging that Google Books amounts to "counterfeiting
" and "breach of intellectual property rights".
The publisher demanded damages of €100,000 for each scanned book.
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