Riding a wave of innovation and a flood of investment money, Google emerged as the dominant internet search engine. It has gone on to provide software and on line services that are essentially free, based on advertising revenue and low costs derived from new technology. But without competition, will it remain free?
What about the libraries, only a handful of which have provided the books for Google to scan, and most of which will have to pay to offer their users access to the scanned texts. The participating libraries are mostly university supported, but the tax-supported public libraries will have to pay for access, as will individuals. Given that it is going to have a near-monopoly, what should public policy be on what they can charge?
And once again we come up with the question posed by copyright, giving publishers and owners a claim on an income stream that would not otherwise have existed. There is no clear public benefit from paying them. The owners will provide no service to receive this bonanza. Nor is the public interest protected to achieve the lowest possible price, consistent with providing the service, the marginal cost to the provider.