Technology forces old laws to contort themselves in new ways. The phonograph and radio threatened to wreck the idea of music copyright — then embodied in sheet music. But lawyers struck novel compromises between new media and old laws; collection societies were set up to pay composers and performers, and the market grew. On October 28 a similar breakthrough was announced for accessing books online.Google has reached a settlement with groups representing authors and publishers who had sued the worlds biggest internet company in 2005 for copyright infringement. Google has been scanning millions of books into digital form and making the text available online in small snippets, to answer users search queries. The company said this constituted fair use of copyrighted material since only a small part of the work was accessible. The Association of American Publishers and the Authors Guild disagreed. The resulting legal fight was widely expected to end in a settlement, but it took a while to agree on the terms. Under the deal, Google will pay $125 million (Rs.622 crore) to compensate copyright holders, and will set up a Book Rights Registry to pay authors and publishers for the digital use and sale of works — akin to collection societies that send royalty cheques to musicians and songwriters. People will be able to buy digital books outright or pay to access them by the page. A small part of each book will be free to consult. Google will take 37 percent of the revenue and 63 percent will go to copyright holders. Publishers and authors can opt out of the programme. Books no longer covered by copyright will be free. The settlement, which must still be approved by the court, may encounter problems. Collection societies often fall foul of anti-trust laws and require special exemptions from legislators. And Google has in effect been granted a licence over almost all copyrighted works represented in the suit, giving it an overwhelming advantage in online-book indexing and retrieval, says Jennifer Urban, a copyright expert at the University of Southern California. That may increase competition concerns that are haunting the firm. The agreement will apply only in America, but is likely to serve as a model for other countries. If successful, it will open up a new realm of knowledge online — and a new market. (Excerpted and adapted from The Economist)