Google’s Exclusion of Books

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The proposed Settlement Agreement includes this section:

Section 3.7(e) Google’s Exclusion of Books
Google may, at its discretion, exclude particular Books from one or more Display Uses for editorial or non-editorial reasons. However, Google’s right to exclude Books for editorial reasons (i.e., not for quality, user experience, legal or other non-editorial reasons) is an issue of great sensitivity to Plaintiffs and Google. Accordingly, because Plaintiffs, Google and the libraries all value the principle of freedom of expression, and agree that this principle is an important part of GBS and other Google Products and Services, Google agrees to notify the Registry of any such exclusion of a Book for editorial reasons and of any information Google has that is pertinent to the Registry’s use of such Book other than Confidential Information of Google and other than information that Google received from a third party under an obligation of confidentiality.

What kind of editorial discretion does Google contemplate using to exclude books from the service? Per the language of the passage, this would exclude legal reasons to exclude materials (ie, child pornography, etc). I have additional thoughts here, but am curious as to what attendees of the conference think. --Michaelzimmer 17:09, 29 July 2009 (UTC)

Note: Google’s Alexander Macgillivray provided some explanations here. --Michaelzimmer 02:37, 31 July 2009 (UTC)