|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
10-03-2006, 03:31 PM | #1 | |||
Fulfilled but not by iRex
Posts: 932
Karma: 286846
Join Date: May 2006
Location: London
Device: Far too many
|
Piracy: And the impressions the publishing industry hold of e-books/ers.
This isn't relevant to the thread going on in the "Why I like the Iliad" thread, so though I would split it off.
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...4&postcount=16 Quote:
Quote:
But I do feel that the problem will be more the impression that publishers have of e-book readers and the devices. Once the publishers have the impression that all e-book readers are theives, then it will be very hard to shake them out of that mindset. I suspect that places such as mobileread/teleread/irex and their forums will come under a great deal of scrutiny over the coming months. And it's there that the publishers will take note of the people openly claiming to be reading pirated books. An analogy would be the height of game piracy on the Amiga format. When games companies started moving much more towards the consoles more and more with the reason that that diddn';t bring out amiga versions because they couldn't afford the piracy. Do we want to give the impression that the only option for publishers is to go with Sony's DRM because people using the iLiad won't pay for content?!?! (OK extreme example I admit). Quote:
I am aware it's skirting the letter of the law (Ok breaking the law entirely) but I don't intend to (and will not) share electronic copies with anyone. And as I own the original paper books I suspect any lawsuit would be laughed out of court. "Wait, so he actually owns the book you claim he pirated?" "yes m'lud!" "And he paid for the book?" "Yes m'lud!" "And he hasn't shared his copy of the book with anyone else, it's just for his personal use?" "So he claims, and we can't find any evidence to the contrary, m'lud!" Last edited by Riocaz; 10-03-2006 at 03:41 PM. |
|||
10-03-2006, 03:40 PM | #2 |
Groupie
Posts: 197
Karma: 16
Join Date: Apr 2006
Device: irex iliad, uk Kindle gen3
|
it's always the same story, publishers too slow to push themselves into the market.
doing deals like amazon/mobipocket may have done will get people to warez books onto their device. |
Advert | |
|
10-03-2006, 03:45 PM | #3 |
Fulfilled but not by iRex
Posts: 932
Karma: 286846
Join Date: May 2006
Location: London
Device: Far too many
|
Yes, but we have a window of oppertunity now, because of the industry hype over the iLiad and the reader, to give the correct impression that as we as a group are not theives.
People posting links to places where you can find them, here, on TeleRead, or the iRex forum can only re-inforce the wrong mindset. (Just re-read that, I diddn't mean to imply that Deadite had done so. I know he diddn't, I am just re-inforcing my point) |
10-03-2006, 03:52 PM | #4 | |
Addict
Posts: 273
Karma: 499
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: San Francisco
Device: Sony Reader
|
Quote:
Now, of course, iTunes and the iPod are the shining example of a killer product combination. If publishers are smart, they'll realize that, while there's a lot of piracy going on, the pirates represent their untapped market, not their enemy. If they can offer a compelling value proposition, many people will cease pirating and instead buy books. |
|
10-03-2006, 04:02 PM | #5 |
Fulfilled but not by iRex
Posts: 932
Karma: 286846
Join Date: May 2006
Location: London
Device: Far too many
|
There is a difference there in that there had always been an element of piracy in msic (copying tapes, recording from the radio etc etc). Books are a little different and I'm unsure if the publishers will be able to see the "untapped market" if they are constantly having this view of "ebookers are pirates" being pushed in their faces.
Last edited by Riocaz; 10-03-2006 at 06:40 PM. |
Advert | |
|
10-03-2006, 04:42 PM | #6 |
Evangelist
Posts: 430
Karma: 2718
Join Date: May 2006
Device: Iliad
|
Well, this 'pirate' with an Iliad has spent approximately $180 at Fictionwise and purchased 2 digital magazine subscriptions to read on the Iliad.
Yes, I take advantage of 'free' when it is available and legal. There is a difference between free and theft. |
10-03-2006, 05:02 PM | #7 |
iLiad Maniac
Posts: 1,382
Karma: 2369
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Germany
Device: Bookeen Opus (i love that thing) and iPad (what an irony)
|
Well, i dont think i will buy ebooks as long as they are as expensive as they are now.
On the other hand i do pirate books. Well, kind of. I just downloaded a copy of the latest Robert Jordan Wheel of Time book and i am reading it on the iLiad. I would like it to have the nice chapter icons and a better layout and not a pagenumber and headline in between every couple of pages, but hey, at least i have it on my iLiad. Or am i not a pirat (at least i dont feel like one), because i do have the hardcover version of the book on my bookshelf. As for sci-fi/fantasy beeing pirated most, i would think so, because all the computer geeks read sci-fi And i have to say, here in germany, movie pirates are called "raubkopierer" and the film industrie is criminalizing the movie theft in a major way. The term "raub" alone is used in legal context only if you steal stuff from someone with weapons force or the threat to do physical harm. I hope the bookindustry is smarter than that and just offers what the customer wants. |
10-03-2006, 05:13 PM | #8 |
Evangelist
Posts: 430
Karma: 2718
Join Date: May 2006
Device: Iliad
|
I think a publisher would have a difficult case proving 'piracy' if you own a copy of a book and locate a different format to read it in.
You are a better customer than a library patron (did I mention I use the library, too?). |
10-03-2006, 06:10 PM | #9 |
iLiad Maniac
Posts: 1,382
Karma: 2369
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Germany
Device: Bookeen Opus (i love that thing) and iPad (what an irony)
|
Yes, but what about those, who go to the library, rent a book, and grab a copy from the net to read it on the iLiad and then delete the ebook, before they return the pbook to the library???
|
10-03-2006, 07:04 PM | #10 | |
Fulfilled but not by iRex
Posts: 932
Karma: 286846
Join Date: May 2006
Location: London
Device: Far too many
|
Tribble, sorry if I wasn't clear enough. We know the majority of us arn't pirates. My point is that the minority may cause an impression that we are by posting links to places you can find them on the foremost forums.
Quote:
|
|
10-03-2006, 08:32 PM | #11 | |
Evangelist
Posts: 430
Karma: 2718
Join Date: May 2006
Device: Iliad
|
Quote:
|
|
10-04-2006, 12:58 PM | #12 |
Gadget fan
Posts: 147
Karma: 3968
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: London
Device: RM Tablet PC, iLiad, PRS 505, iPod Touch
|
Don't you know that you are criminals? We are criminals with a high IQ so that we don't steal money no more but books.
I heard that the police has arrested a group of people hiding in a cellar and reading stolen books. Sorry for these bad jokes... I don't think that the community is made up of people who are pirates or guilty in stealing books. Unfortunately our reader device can not provide us yet legal content, but we have to live with it as it is. Not using it would be a bigger crime to the mankind. As long as the desired book is not available for the particular ereader, you are using, you are not guilty, if you get it from somewhere else, because you have no other choice. I think the publishing industry is for us and not we are for them. They have to comply with our needs first, because we are the customers, I guess. |
10-04-2006, 07:46 PM | #13 | |
Wizard
Posts: 1,018
Karma: 67827
Join Date: Jan 2005
Device: PocketBook Era
|
Quote:
The reason eBook piracy is out there is the same reason that music piracy is there: the industry refuses to listen to the customers and change their business models to satisfy the market that exists. |
|
10-08-2006, 06:17 AM | #14 |
Addict
Posts: 219
Karma: 368
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: UK
Device: PRS500, Looking at 700
|
Once there is a viable alternative to piracy a lot of people will take that option.
It's very much a chicken and egg situation. Until this new wave of e-ink devices settles down and is shown to be a growth market, publishers will hold back on the content. But in order to sell the devices to the mass audience you need a solid catalogue and probably a common format for people to get behind. Until that starts to happen the easiest way to populate a device with content is going to be through piracy. Just as is was with early MP3 players. Personally I had no MP3s until I bought my first iPod because I had no use for them. Similarly I had no e-books until I knew about Sony's device coming out. I then rebuilt most of my P-book library in e-book form. I would like to think Sony will extend their Connect store to my country so I can continue to purchase books legally in a form that is designed for my device. Until that happens I'm very limited in where I can legally obtain content that will work on my chosen device so I am forced to look elsewhere. The iliad IMO has an even worse time of it. With no native DRM and no associated store it appears to me that your choice of content can only ever be non-DRM stuff which limits you as much as the lack of a CONNECT store in the UK limits me. I see the e-book industry as still trying to get it's feet despite it's age. The hardware has never really been in place before to truly support an e-book environment so therefore the publishing has always been limited. That may well start to change with the likes of Sony, amazon, iRex etc launching e-ink devices. Only time will tell. |
10-08-2006, 08:10 AM | #15 |
Zealot
Posts: 124
Karma: 177
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Bochum, Germany
Device: MP2K, iLiad
|
Stupid, greedy publishers
IANAL, but in Germany the situation is like this:
It is illegal to download a pdf-book to read on your iliad if the author (directly or indirectly) does not allow you to do so. It is still illegal to "buy" a drm-encumbered lit-book and convert it to pdf to read on your iliad if the author (directly or indirectly) does not allow you to do so. So: Which illegal option do you choose? The one where they take your money but still threaten to sue you or the one where they just threaten to sue you? #!chris (of course you could still buy a book, take it apart, scan it and throw the physical book away. Might be an interesting business model, you buy your book at my store and I'll scan it and give you the pdf (and maybe the physical book, too) I have to do the numbers on that and ask a lawyer :-) ) Last edited by k2r; 10-08-2006 at 08:20 AM. Reason: typo |
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
E-books spark battle in the publishing industry. | sibelhodge | News | 1 | 12-28-2009 11:19 AM |
E-books spark battle inside the publishing industry | kjk | News | 3 | 12-28-2009 07:25 AM |
Piracy is hurting the _____ industry | ahi | News | 47 | 10-14-2009 12:59 PM |
Piracy destroying the industry! | FizzyWater | Lounge | 5 | 07-30-2009 07:16 PM |
How can the publishing industry combat ebook piracy? | charlieperry | News | 15 | 08-05-2008 06:12 PM |