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Hi. Not much news of late because I came down some kind of gastrointestinal bug a few days ago and am sick as dog. Well, it's not quite that bad. I'm as semi-sick as a dog. An aire-, perhaps, or a -schund.But I soldier on. Today, I thought you'd be interested in reading, if you haven't already:
Ursula K. Le Guin's letter of resignation from the Authors Guild
18 December 2009
To Whom it may concern at the Authors Guild:
I have been a member of the Authors Guild since 1972.
At no time during those thirty-seven years was I able to attend the functions, parties, and so forth offered by the Guild to members who happen to live on the other side of the continent. I have naturally resented this geographical discrimination, reflected also in the officership of the Guild, always almost all Easterners. But it was a petty gripe when I compared it to my gratitude to the Guild for the work you were doing in defending writers’ rights. I went on paying top dues and thought it worth it.
And now you have sold us down the river.
I am not going to rehearse any arguments pro and anti the “Google settlement.” You decided to deal with the devil, as it were, and have presented your arguments for doing so. I wish I could accept them. I can’t. There are principles involved, above all the whole concept of copyright; and these you have seen fit to abandon to a corporation, on their terms, without a struggle.
So, after being a loyal if invisible member for so long, I am resigning from the Guild. I am, however, retaining membership in the National Writers Union and the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, both of which opposed the “Google settlement.” They don’t have your clout, but their judgment, I think, is sounder, and their courage greater.
Yours truly,
Ursula K. Le Guin
This is vintage Le Guin -- calm, reasoned, a model of lucidity, practically unanswerable. So of course the Authors Guild tried to answer her. Their argument was essentially: Yes, it would have been nice to keep copyright the way it was, that's why we sued Google in the first place. But if we'd lost, then anybody could have copied anything and sold downloads of it without regard for the author's wishes.
So they panicked and, as Le Guin said, sold us down the river.
We're at the end of a decade that began with the attack on the World Trade Towers and ended with the Google Settlement, and everyone's looking for a name for it. May I proffer, without wish of personal credit, the Age of Cowardice?
You can read the Guardian's even-handed account here. Or the Authors Guild's statement here. Both links courtesy of Locus, of course.
Yours truly,
Ursula K. Le Guin
This is vintage Le Guin -- calm, reasoned, a model of lucidity, practically unanswerable. So of course the Authors Guild tried to answer her. Their argument was essentially: Yes, it would have been nice to keep copyright the way it was, that's why we sued Google in the first place. But if we'd lost, then anybody could have copied anything and sold downloads of it without regard for the author's wishes.
So they panicked and, as Le Guin said, sold us down the river.
We're at the end of a decade that began with the attack on the World Trade Towers and ended with the Google Settlement, and everyone's looking for a name for it. May I proffer, without wish of personal credit, the Age of Cowardice?
You can read the Guardian's even-handed account here. Or the Authors Guild's statement here. Both links courtesy of Locus, of course.
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