Friday, December 17, 2004

Google and the libraries

Scott Rosenberg at Salon has some interesting comments on Google's project to digitise the contents of 5 famous academic libraries.

"Since we are, after all, talking about digitizing the entire body of published human knowledge, I can't help thinking that a public-sector effort -- whether government-backed or non-profit or both -- is more likely to serve the long-term public good. I know that's an unfashionable position in this market-driven era. It's also an unrealistic one given the current U.S. government's priorities.

But public investment has a pretty enviable track record: Think of the public goods that Americans enjoy today because the government chose to seed them and insure their universality -- from the still-essential Social Security program to the interstate highway system to the Internet itself. In an ideal world, it seems to me, Google would be a technology contractor for an institution like the Library of Congress. I'd rather see the company that builds the tools of access to information be an enabler of universal access than a gatekeeper or toll-taker.

The public has a big interest in making sure that no one business has a chokehold on the flow of human knowledge."

I think he may be reading a little too much into the Google initiative, since it's really only a small first step but you don't see too many liberal US journalists advocating public investment in preference to letting the market take its course.

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