NEW YORK - The latest chapter is about to unfold in a four-year-old copyright lawsuit over Google's ambitious book-scanning project.
Google Inc. and the publishers suing the company have until the end of Monday to come up with a new settlement.
They have to address the U.S. Justice Department's antitrust objections to a previous agreement.
The case involves Google's plans to scan millions of books and make them searchable and available for purchase online.
A proposed $125 million settlement would give Google digital rights to those works.
But the government told a federal judge in New York that the agreement threatens to give Google the power to increase book prices and discourage competition.