Microsoft is ending its Live Book Search project citing reasons that it didn't have enough users to justify the company's investment.
Microsoft owns the third most popular US search engine, trailing Google and Yahoo Inc., according to research firm ComScore Inc.
By Penny Gottardi May 23, 2008 23:54 PM GMT
Microsoft Corp. is ending its Live Book Search program that let Web users search through digital versions of books, ceding the market to Google Inc. The move will allow Microsoft to focus on other types of Internet searches, such as travel listings, Senior Vice President Satya Nadella said today in a blog posting. Spokesman Scott Trepanier declined to say how much Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft had spent on the book project. "We recognize that this decision comes as disappointing news to our partners," Nadella said. Microsoft is making changes to its Internet business as it chooses battles with Google, owner of the dominant search engine. Microsoft said this week it would offer rebates to shoppers who buy products through its Live.com search system, taking a different tack than Google. The company started making digital copies of out-of-print books in December 2006, later making deals with publishers to scan their books, after Google started a similar program with libraries.
The book search site didn't get enough users to justify Microsoft's investment, said Clifford Guren, the company's senior director of publisher evangelism for the project. Publishers such as HarperCollins Publishers and Random House Inc. are digitizing their own books, he said."We had to ask if it was right for us to do this or the publishers," Guren said. "For the publishers, it is in their long-term best interest." Google's book search project, which began in 2004, works with Harvard University, the New York Public Library and other organizations to scan books. The company also works with about 10,000 publishers to digitize their books. While Google hasn't detailed how it will turn book searches into a profitable business, it could use the feature to run advertisements alongside query results or to share profits with publishers when users buy books or portions of books, said Jim Milliot, news editor at Publishers Weekly, a trade magazine.
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