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Wednesday, January 27, 2010
File-Sharing Sites to Help Stop Book Piracy
Publishers Ask
File-Sharing Sites to Help Stop Book Piracy
A group of
publishers is stepping up its fight against pirated textbooks, study guides,
and trade books by trying to convince the most popular file-trading sites to
install filters or take other measures to stop unauthorized copies of books
from appearing on their services.
But will asking
nicely spur companies that have not previously adopted such publisher-friendly
practices to change?
A committee of
the Association of American Publishers spent the past several months drafting a
set of "recommendations for best practices." The group plans to meet
with several file-sharing Web sites in the next few weeks to present the
recommendations, said Ed McCoyd, the publishing group's executive director for
digital, environmental, and accessibility affairs.
"The thrust
of this is that if they want to run a business, they should do everything they
can to make sure the main activity on their site is legal and not
infringing," Mr. McCoyd said of the file-sharing sites.
He declined to
share the draft recommendations because officials are still making final
changes in their wording. But the highlights of the document were published in the latest edition of the publishing group's newsletter.
The group
recommends that file-sharing sites should:
* Install filters to block copyrighted material from being posted.
* Send warning notices to users who post copyrighted material, telling them that such activity is illegal.
* Create and enforce policies that disable the accounts of users who repeatedly post copyrighted material.
* Provide links to sites that offer legal methods of buying electronic books.
* Give publishers lists of books that have been blocked or removed from their sites.
Convincing
file-sharing sites to take those actions may be a tall order, though. The sites
are advertising- based, and kicking off users who post illegal materials would
reduce the sites' numbers of visitors and page views, and possibly their advertising
revenue.
Mr. McCoyd said
the plan is to encourage full adoption of the guidelines. "All of the best
practices would need to be adopted to really make a difference," he said.
Officials at
several of the most popular file-sharing sites did not return calls seeking
comment on Wednesday.
One company,
Scribd, a document-sharing Web site, has already met twice with the publishing
group, though it has not yet received the new recommendations.
"Scribd
has some of the best practices, if not the best practices, in the industry
regarding copyright management for written works," Michelle Laird, a
spokeswoman for the company, said in an e-mail message.
Scribd already
posts a policy stating that any "repeat infringer" will be barred
from the site. Ms. Laird did not say whether the company plans to follow all of
the group's recommendations.
Collaborative Approach
Maria Danzilo,
legal director for John Wiley & Sons Inc., which has participated in
drafting the new guidelines, said the group is "trying to come up with something
that is collaborative" with the file-sharing Web sites. "The whole
point of these best practices is to really try to come up with a way of
encouraging cooperation between various interests," she said.
Wiley has two
full-time staff members assigned to search online for pirated editions of the
company's books, Ms. Danzilo said, and they see all kinds of titles on
file-sharing sites. One category popular with pirates is study guides for
textbooks, which are intended for professors but can be used by students to
cheat on their homework.
Findings of a
study released last week by Attributor Corporation, which helps companies
search for pirated works, showed widespread availability of a sample of books
it searched for on 25 file-sharing sites. The most popular books of the sampled
set among pirates were those dealing with business and investing, with
professional and technical books coming next. The study did
not analyze textbooks as a category.
The vast
majority of the pirated copies appeared on two sites, RapidShare and 4shared,
the report found.
What if those
companies and others choose not to adopt the publishers' guidelines?
"There is
a serious threat of liability for file-sharing sites if they can't get control
of illegal activities that are going on," said Mr. McCoyd.
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