Google Books: Hold Your Horses?

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Writing for the American Historical Association Blog AHA Today, Robert B. Townsend reminds us that Google Books, perhaps the most hyped digital initiative ever, has its problems. Among those discussed by Townsend are poor scan quality, incorrect or nonsensical metadata, and the application of copyright restriction to titles which rightly belong in the public domain, such as federal government publications. To these could be added incomplete metadata (where are the Library of Congress Subject Headings?); lack of control in searching when compared with most modern library catalogs and databases (Hey Google, ever heard of truncation? How about proximity search?); and several others. Townsend doesn't want Google Books, the project, to be abandoned; he simply wishes to see the brakes applied: "What particularly troubles me is the likelihood that these problems will just be compounded over time. From my own modest experience here at the AHA, I know how hard it is to go back and correct mistakes online when the imperative is always to move forward, to add content and inevitably pile more mistakes on top of the ones already buried one or two layers down." Many cataloging librarians would I'm sure sympathize with that last thought.

Several of the commenters on Townsend's post point out that it is not Google's responsibility to play by the rules of libraries or the academy. After all, isn't Google Books just a slick marketing tool for connecting users with libraries and bookstores, where the original, printed versions of titles can then be borrowed and purchased? Arguments such as these, however, ring hollow in the face of the glowing testimonials posted by Google on its own web site. Take, for example, this quote from the Library Journal's editor-in-chief: "[Google Book Search] has the potential to revolutionize research and to make the libraries of the world into the world's library." Or this from a Bodleian librarian at Oxford: "Public domain books belong where the worldwide public can use them; and that is where the Bodleian, like its other library partners, wants them to be seen." No, the reality is that people in and outside academia have very high expectations for Google Books. Google knows this quite well, and plays into the hype for all it's worth.

Hopefully Google and its library partners will not ignore the legitimate concerns raised in Townsend’s post. Rather than work to slow down the pace of digitization, librarians will undoubtedly continue to drive home the message that Google Books is merely one of a host of book digitization projects that students can and should investigate during the course of their research.

--David C. Murray

3 Comments

SEO Company said:

As an Alumni of Temple University, I hate to think that Paley Library could be obsoleted by Google Books. The complete collection (with real 'metadata') made my education, not only better, but more rewarding. It gave me a place to quietly read--something my dorm room didn't have.

I also agree with you in your thoughts about the importance of meta data, and it's a bit shocking that Google, a search company, would be having trouble in this respect. Google should want all the meta data in the world for everything it puts on there. Afterall, I should be able to find it in the same way I did at Paley Library, correct?

David said:

Thanks for your comment! There's a lot going on in the library world relating to "library as place," so we're all pretty sure that, even in the digital age, the library will be around in one form or another.

I'm glad too that someone besides a librarian appreciates metadata, or data that describes a library resource (for example, a book's title, author, and the subjects it covers are all metadata found in the catalog record). Google Books doesn't include the Library of Congress subject headings (LCSH) in its metadata for a book, so the user can't search Google Books in the same way you used to in Temple's Diamond catalog. At some point, I'm hoping that LCSH will be added to the metadata for books available through Google Books. Technologically, this is quite possible since most of these books have already been cataloged (see Open WorldCat for the librarian-generated catalog records).

Fred333 said:

I thought Google books had so much promise too.

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This page contains a single entry by David published on May 21, 2007 3:10 PM.

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