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Losing the plot

By Zhu Linyong and Zhang Zixuan (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-11-17 07:51

Losing the plot

Ma Hailing is a bookworm. When not at work as an IT retailer in Beijing, she can usually be found reading or shopping for new novels. For her, the digital age could not have come soon enough.

The 32-year-old said that being able to download books has saved her a lot of time and energy.

"Thanks to the Internet, I don't have to carry around piles of heavy books, and I don't need to travel all the way to a crowded library," she said, adding that she reads downloaded novels on her Hanvon e-book tablet and 3G cell phone.

Ma is one of thousands of Chinese readers taking advantage of the progress in the technology used by the telecommunications and publishing industries, which is putting an increasing number of books literally at the fingertips of consumers.

At least 695 million people use cell phones in China, more than half of the population, according to figures released by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology in July.

"Reading on palm-top devices like cell phones has become the latest fad among Chinese, especially young people," said Hao Zhenxing, director of the China Publishing Science Research Institute in Beijing.

A study by the institute in September suggested that at least 24 percent of Chinese between 18 and 70 years old have had a "digital reading experience", with that figure rising to 100 percent for those aged 14 to 17. Meanwhile, the gross output of the mobile phone reading service market is expected to reach almost 60 million yuan ($8.78 million) this year, according to market research firm Frost and Sullivan.

Experts agree the e-book market has huge potential in China but is being undermined by rampant pirate operations.

The recent dispute with Google has highlighted the real battle Chinese authors face in protecting their copyrights online, analysts say.

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Losing the plot Google admits to scanning books

Google, an Internet search engine based in the United States, is seeking rights to scan and offer for download out-of-print books as part of larger efforts to create a modern-day Library of Alexandria, one of the most famous libraries of the ancient world.

Work on Google Books, which is available to netizens only in the US, began four years ago and already boasts seven million titles in various languages under US copyright, including 18,000 by 570 Chinese writers.

However, the company's methods have been controversial, especially as most books were scanned without permission from publishers and authors.

"We started looking into the scanning of Chinese books after a notice from the International Federation of Reproduction Rights Organizations," said Zhang Hongbo, deputy director of the non-profit China Written Works Copyright Society. "Google may have violated the copyrights of an unknown number of Chinese authors.

"Sharing cultural resources has become a trend in the Internet age, but the copyrights of any individual author should be respected and protected."

Google is in the final stages of reaching settlements with two US copyright organizations, and the company announced at the weekend it would send representatives to meet China's copyright watchdog officials on Friday.

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