Google to allow free downloads of books
Image hosted by Imageshack Google Inc. on Wednesday plans to begin letting consumers download and print free of charge classic novels and many other, more obscure books that are in the public domain.

Using Google’s Book Search service, Web surfers hunting titles like Dante’s “Inferno” and Aesop’s “Fables” will be able to download PDF files of the books for later reading, to run keyword searches or to print them on paper. Up to now, the service only allowed people to read the out-of-copyright books online.

Google supports the service by showing its small, keyword-generated text ads on search-results pages.

The download initiative does not include any books under copyright. For these titles, Book Search only displays basic bibliographic information and, in many cases, small snippets of text surrounding a search term, unless it has permission from the publisher to show more. The company’s display of snippets has riled some publishers, but Google has argued the small bites of text constitute fair use.

Google’s Book Search service is the product of its Books Library Project, which is digitizing books from major libraries around the world in order to make them searchable online. Its partners include the University of Michigan, Harvard University, Stanford University, Oxford University, the University of California and the New York Public Library. Google is also conducting a pilot project with the Library of Congress.

I am loving this, add support to convert the books to be read on a Apple ipod (you know they are going to add support to read books on the ipod) and I’d be set.  Currently it’s a pretty decent selection of books available for download, but like what was meantioned, only the ones out of copyright.  But that still leaves plenty of reading material for when you are stuck in that waiting room…

Here is a search that will list all of the free books.

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2 Comments on Google to allow free downloads of books

  1. seth says:

    Have you not heard of
    Gutenberg?
    75,000 books, free.
    & look around the site – the ‘support’ for your iPod lurks within.

  2. I had heard of it, but it had been a while. And last time I looked, the selection had been mixed, and the options for distribution was text files or TeX. Not the greatest for normal use.

    It’s good to see that they’ve cleaned up, but the search isn’t the greatest. Ane having them strictly as web pages with no options to download the web pages or in another format like PDF, rtf, ps, text, or some industry standard, kind of buggers it for me.

    FYI – Fixed your link

Bad Behavior has blocked 6572 access attempts in the last 7 days.