07-28-2009, 11:33 AM | #451 |
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> However, if a popular site arose that handled, among other things,
> anonymous file-sharing, and e-books became a significant proportion > of the shared media, it could manage to capture enough of the web > population to start to generate the kind of e-book transaction > numbers (however fair or ilicit) that every pub would have to take notice of. Yep. Thats exactly what happened in Russia - www.lib.ru - Moshkow's Library. That place had pretty much everything up on free access that they managed to OCR. And perhaps not coincidentally, they now have the most customer-friendly e-book business one could wish for. |
07-28-2009, 12:16 PM | #452 | |
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Most stores don't strip-search people as they leave, but a lot of them have switched to magnetic strips in the boxes that will set off an alarm if they haven't been de-activated when leaving. This is done even though the VAST majority of customers are not thieves--it's accepted because the inconvenience really is minor (I'd say nonexistent, but it does occasionally cause a hold-up at the door when the magnetic wiping didn't work), and ends the moment the customer leaves the store. If publishers could find a way to prevent illegal torrent use without inconveniencing legal actions, that'd be great. (Nothing comes to mind off the top of my head.) |
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07-28-2009, 01:13 PM | #453 | ||
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Last edited by Steven Lyle Jordan; 07-28-2009 at 01:17 PM. |
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07-28-2009, 02:10 PM | #454 |
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> Dismissing DRM out of hand, because the present systems don't
> work well, is doing the idea a disservice. The idea of DRM / copy protection of digital objects is -not- new. In software, many schemes have been tried. For 30+ years. If we had a solution that would be applicable on e-books, we'd tell you. Honest! |
07-28-2009, 06:02 PM | #455 | |||
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Just to once again clarify, I see an increase in "file-sharing" for two reasons. 1: The availability and ease of use of torrent programs reducing the barrier to doing so. As more and more people learn to use these programs and the programs get better, it will become easier to torrent and therefore people are more likely to do so. 2: The attitude that everyone should have free and unlimited access to all digital media because digital media has "zero value" is gaining acceptence. If someone believes something has "zero value" they will be unwilling to pay anything for it. Not because they are greedy or immoral but simply because they think it has "zero value" and therefore they should have a right to access it for free. Quote:
Anyway, I'm done with discussing this issue because it seems now that I must simply repeat myself ad nauseum as you continually seem to disregard most of what I say in order to fixate on some specific point that you disagree with. Cheers, PKFFW |
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07-28-2009, 06:17 PM | #456 | |
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07-28-2009, 06:32 PM | #457 |
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I wonder how much free/cheap ebooks can boost other book sales and author reputation? I notice many, but not all cheap ebooks do pretty well in material book format. Just a thought.
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07-28-2009, 09:12 PM | #458 | ||
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07-28-2009, 09:22 PM | #459 | |
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07-28-2009, 09:24 PM | #460 | |
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That sounds oddly Orwellian. Last edited by Jaime_Astorga; 07-29-2009 at 12:45 AM. |
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07-28-2009, 09:31 PM | #461 |
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07-28-2009, 10:08 PM | #462 | |
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Hm, how about a winning combination of easy availability and reasonable (to the majority of the market) prices.... |
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07-28-2009, 11:24 PM | #463 |
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Yes... it's doublespeak. Used to obscure the meaning of your words.
Let's be a bit clearer: DRM is designed to allow certain kinds of use of content, while restricting others. In the case of e-books, DRM is most often used to tie the content to a specific device, to prevent copying and dissemination of bootleg copies to other devices. Certain other media and commercial organizations have demonstrated that this concept can be workable and acceptable to the majority of people, provided the incentives for being forthright outweigh the advantages of being criminal. The better the incentives are, the less obtrusive DRM can be used, and the more acceptable it can be to all concerned. The combination of acceptable DRM and acceptable incentives to abide by it have not yet been found in relation to e-books. |
07-28-2009, 11:48 PM | #464 | ||
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The base problem with DRM is that it's either ineffective since having access to the content also means being able to break the DRM, or it's massively intrusive by requiring a complete, end-to-end secure connection on your computer controlled by many other people (all of the content owners). Even the latter is not enough, people will be able to break or bypass it, if by no other means than the analogue hole. Check out http://www.flickr.com/photos/bkrpr/3403655734/ (originally from http://bkrpr.org/blog/?p=46). Yes, that's a camera being used to photograph an ebook on a bookreader in a manner suitable for OCR. Can you imagine a DRM system that could stop that? Or that maybe it'll become illegal to bring a camera into the presence of a media viewer? Even though it may be difficult, it only has to be broken once by someone with the right skills or obsession and then it can be placed on the darknet and used by people without the technical skills to break it themselves. Bear in mind I have no objection to artists being paid, indeed one of my earlier posts was asking you what you thought about a fixed fee for access to your works. I'm simply stating that naive technical restrictions are not the solution and legal ones are even worse. Last edited by Kirtai; 07-28-2009 at 11:54 PM. |
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07-29-2009, 01:09 AM | #465 |
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Indeed. Are you aware though that a lot of people probably have long ago gotten the impression that you yourself are precisely in that category?
Your understanding of encryption, DRM, and copyright issues seems about as nuanced as the average Mobileread members' understanding of typography is. (Of course, the latter is far less likely to lead to embarrassment.) You've obviously heard about it here and there, doubtless read about it many a times in ill-researched news articles... but (or perhaps because of this) you categorically refuse to stop mischaracterizing the issues, no matter how many times people explain to you (many of them far more politely and patiently than is warranted) why things aren't the way you imagine them to be. - Ahi |
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