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...goals of the project. “We’re dedicated to helping the world find information, and there’s too much information in books that cannot yet be found online,” David Drummond, general counsel and vice president of corporate development, wrote on Google??s corporate blog Wednesday.HUL, which is not a party to the lawsuits, supports Google??s interpretation of copyright law and will continue with the project, Pforzheimer University Professor and Director of the University Library Sidney Verba ’53 wrote in a statement...
...mini-MBA program” brings in Business School and FAS professors to talk to interested students about their companies and offer advice on relevant issues. Chris Sacca, who is a principal for new business development at Google talked to the crowd about Google??s mission. “There are a lot of you in this room who will build companies we will soon buy,” Sacca said to chuckles, urging the technophiles to abandon their companies and work at Google instead. —Staff writer Jeffrey P. Amlin can be reached at amlin@fas.harvard.edu
Thank you for your excellent and well-detailed editorial on Google??s efforts to digitize the holdings of major research libraries, including Harvard’s (“Technological Tomes,” Sept. 29). The article articulates well the many reasons that we think this project is a valuable and path-breaking one. Two clarifications may be helpful to your readers...
...tribute to Google??s soft-power in the liberal academic community—rare, if non-existent among most corporations—that they have the permission and goodwill to make the library collections of Harvard, Stanford, the University of Michigan available to academic cmomunities around the world. (As well as making, to a smaller but still significant extent, the Oxford and the New York Public Library available.) Already much trumpeted for speeding up global information access, the process of globalization would take a leap forward with this initiative, which involves the scanning and uploading of materials...
Adam M. Smith, the Google Print Project Manager, announced the decision to suspend the scanning of copyrighted books in early August on Google??s corporate blog. He wrote that the scanning would stop to allow publishers time to inform Google of books they did not want included in the project...