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Even after the passing of all those years there is still money to be made, with HarperCollins predicting sales of a million Christie books every year, and not only in print either. The deal also allowed HarperCollins to exploit the books in digital format too.
Of course, as with any product online there are people out there prepared to exploit the same content digitally, through more unofficial channels. To that end HarperCollins has been hiring anti-piracy companies to remove files and links from the Internet in the hope that unauthorized content will be harder to find. However, there have been unintended consequences.
In a notice HarperCollins sent to Google via anti-piracy company Digimarc, the company requested the takedown of 1,000 URLs. Google wasn't 100% happy with the request and refused to remove most of them, 914 URLs in total.
The exact reasons why that huge number of URLs were rejected will become clear when the full notices are published by ChillingEffects in due course, but drilling down into one specific domain said to be engaged in piracy - Apple.com - we can see a selection of the takedowns were for Agatha Christie books.
At this point Google's refusal to comply becomes clear. In a crazy attempt at self-censorship, HarperCollins/Digimarc had asked the search engine to remove listings of their very own official Christie products for sale on iTunes.
A further notice with another 1000 URLs had 917 takedown requests rejected by Google. It lists nine Christie books (seven explicitly marked as HarperCollins products) and asks for them all to be taken down from iTunes. Another requesting 267 takedowns had 249 rejected by Google. At least two were official publications on iTunes. In nine additional notices asking Google to remove 9,000 URLs, the search engine rejected 7,829 of them.
We won't go through every single notice in detail here, but one in particular provokes a vigorous shaking of the head. In Notice 982803 HarperCollins asks for 1000 URLs to be taken down and Google rejected 901. Among other things it requests that Google delist iTunes pages carrying four Agatha Christie books, three of which aren't even available on the site and are marked as "Expected Release: 13 March 2014."
Taking down listings on Google linking to your own official content on iTunes claiming that it's been pirated by Apple three whole months before its even been released - that has to be a first.
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