Goodreads Librarians Group discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Archived
>
Amazon is going away as a data source

Geeze, there's a book on it that I've translated myself.
I don't even know why you mark these books as "Amazon sourced", since for many I've manually entered the information. Amazon had nothing to do with it (I bet it doesn't even have info on some of those Dutch books).
Lousy idea, this whole operation, if you ask me.



1. Randomhouse.co.uk doesn't have page numbers listed (if they do, someone tell me where to find it?). Since it is a big publisher though, it's a reliable data source though to use. Is it okay to find the page numbers from another website or should we just leave it blank?
2. Is there a way to see a list of ALL books that are in danger of being deleted? I'm far from done with fixing my own shelves but I'm sort of done with the critical ones and I think it would be better to help out rescuing books that are to be deleted, than those that are to be merged.

1. It's okay to use page numbers from another site if both the following are met...a) it is not an ecommerce site and b) the page numbers given are for that specific ISBN. If you have the book with you, just check it manually.
2. Not at this time. I think the staff is waiting to see how many books still need rescuing after the big import before implementing these types of tools.
*wanders off to rescue all her books*
I feellike that dude that was walking through a river, holding a basket of books over his head!
I feellike that dude that was walking through a river, holding a basket of books over his head!

I have to say though I often find Amazon's page counts can be wildly wrong compared to actual copy.

Pam wrote: "Ok, I read through several pages here but not all of the comments so I apologize if this has already been asked. How will this effect books not yet published? Especially from Indie authors that do ..."
If they or their publishers entered the books themselves, with them as the source, they should be fine. If they sourced the data from Amazon (which they could have done if it's pre-order there) then it may be in danger.
If they or their publishers entered the books themselves, with them as the source, they should be fine. If they sourced the data from Amazon (which they could have done if it's pre-order there) then it may be in danger.

I don't know how long it will take to clear the cache though. It may not be until after all the new data is in.
ETA: I was replying Abigail's question about her rescue list, not indie authors!

Wait. That isn't correct because it requires a "source URL". I don't have to cut and past..." Same here. That's the question that keeps getting asked that isn't getting answered. I emailed goodreads; hopefully I'll get an answer with instructions that make sense. If I do, I'll be sure to post it. I'm a KDP select author.


That is what I was afraid of...



They did, the ability to search by ISBN/ASIN and auto import a book from Amazon has "not worked" for a week or so
Can you link to a book - so we can see what data is "Amazon" sourced

I am specifically thinking of The Internet Speculative Fiction Database which uses Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0).

Anyone who is a goodreads author can rescue their own books, if they own a copy (it seems highly unlikely that they wouldn't have at least one copy around physically or digitally). Simply select the 'I have a copy present' check box. Then a source url is not required.

I've rescued the affected books so I don't have an example to offer.
However, Thinking about it further, maybe I was adding books to my shelves from the Goodreads database that had uncleaned Amazon data (hence being "at risk") rather than sucking in new Amazon data.
I'll keep an eye on it and share anything of interest (but I now currently plan a personal moratorium on adding new books until things have stabilised).

Stephen wrote: "KDP authors not enrolled in the select program have other options, but select authors don't. They will only have their books for sale at amazon.com. Does this mean that these authors are excluded..."
It's already been stated by Otis that Amazon will continue to provide the feed for KDP books, it is the books from "other publishers" for which Amazon-sourced data can no longer be used.
I would assume this is because Amazon is providing the data as a publisher in the case of KDP books, not to mention that Amazon probably doesn't want all their KDP books disappearing from the most popular book site on the internet.
It's already been stated by Otis that Amazon will continue to provide the feed for KDP books, it is the books from "other publishers" for which Amazon-sourced data can no longer be used.
I would assume this is because Amazon is providing the data as a publisher in the case of KDP books, not to mention that Amazon probably doesn't want all their KDP books disappearing from the most popular book site on the internet.
Stephen wrote: "I did rescue my own book, thanks. My concern is that I'm not able to allow for downloads of my book via goodreads. And, unless I'm wrong, I can't allow access to my book at amazon via this site t..."
We posted at the same time. I see what your concern was now. I believe I saw something about this only effecting the data contained in the book records, not the linking to book sources.
We posted at the same time. I see what your concern was now. I believe I saw something about this only effecting the data contained in the book records, not the linking to book sources.


It's the weekend, so we will likely not be hearing anything until Monday morning (Pacific time).
I also would like to know when on Monday the massive import of data is going to occur and if that will in any way affect accessibility and speed (we don't want to be busy trying to rescue books if the site will be very much slowed down during the data imports etc.).

After such a big announcement, and having seen that your community is clearly worried, I would have expected more presence.


I have tried a few and it seemed to work. Now, I am going to wait until after the mass import of data on Monday. I have a feeling that I will still have more than enough German language books to deal with, sigh, but hopefully, some of my over 1300 books to be rescued will be helped with and by the data import.


I had one book that had the same issues. I just gave up. But another librarian suggested just leaving the publication date blank and only filling in the title and the author's name (and then revisiting the publication date later).

I would put the date that is on the current listing, rescue it, and then change it after it's rescued (at least that's how I bypassed some of my rescued books).



Velma wrote: "Is there any indication about whether or not the new data to be imported in the 14m title db will overwrite the data we are manually entering when rescuing titles?"
No, books that have been rescued by a user will not be overridden by imports.
No, books that have been rescued by a user will not be overridden by imports.

Pam - I had quite a few books not yet published on my rescue list, but I found all of them listed on Worldcat.org. I was able to rescue all of them using the worldcat data. And I got a lot of cover images from the author's websites or blogs. Hope this helps you. :)

For example, I rescued this book:
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/41...
whose title was apparently previously listed as "La lumière du matin: Roman (Les Bonheurs courts)" -- I entered it as just "La lumière du matin" -- and the previous title is still showing as the original title.
(I'm not sure what can be done if this is a problem, so I hope it's not!)




I skimmed a bit and members seem to be able to figure out how many of their shelved books are at risk.
How, please?
And, what does this mean?
Thanks for any info in a nutshell.

I skimmed a bit and members seem to be able to figure out how many of their shelved books are at risk.
How, please?
And, what does this mean?
Thanks for any info in..."
IF you're a librarian, go to Post #1 and click on Otis' link. If you're not a librarian, hang tight. After the 14+ million import, GR will re-evaluate and decide if the rescue function should be opened up to all the members of GR. (If a relatively small number of books remain to be rescued, the librarians will probably be able to get them all.)
Jennifer E. wrote: "I'm wondering if whether, after someone manually added a book, Amazon's import "found" the book and then over-wrote enough information to tag the entry as it's own."
It never worked that way. The problem is more like this: users searched by ISBN or title. Book imported from Amazon with title, author, ISBN and nothing else. Users edited book to add more info. But it still shows up (and will unless an import or rescue changes it) as sourced by Amazon.
The "anchor" data for a book is what the rescue page make you correct: Title, author, (and ISBN).
It never worked that way. The problem is more like this: users searched by ISBN or title. Book imported from Amazon with title, author, ISBN and nothing else. Users edited book to add more info. But it still shows up (and will unless an import or rescue changes it) as sourced by Amazon.
The "anchor" data for a book is what the rescue page make you correct: Title, author, (and ISBN).

Thanks, Jennifer. I am a librarian. I've just been mia recently. I'll check the link, yes. I'm still not sure how anxious I should be about this.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Tough Guide to Fantasyland (other topics)The Tough Guide to Fantasyland (other topics)
The Tough Guide to Fantasyland (other topics)
The Newbery Companion: Booktalk and Related Materials for Newbery Medal and Honor Books (other topics)
Der Weiße Wolf (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Norbert Elias (other topics)Catherine Gaskin (other topics)
I noticed that almost all of the books I hav..."
I checked out one of the books on that publisher's site, and found that it was in ISBNDB. I think I saw a link in one of the forums where Michael was testing a batch of imports from that site, so maybe hold off until we've been told that all imports are done and the list of at-risk books is final?