12-13-2010, 05:07 PM | #1 |
Reading is sexy
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Goodreads.com promoting ebook "sharing"?
I'm in a book club on Goodreads.com, and for this month's book there is someone in the discussion forums offering "If you'd like an ebook copy of the book (no profit to me) I'll share. Just send me a message."
I flagged this message for the mods, suggesting that it was not appropriate to promote this type of "sharing" on a site that (I thought) supports authors. I've just received a message from the mods saying "We wanted to let you know that we decided not to delete the comment you flagged recently." [emp mine] Without trying to start another piracy thread, how do people on mobileread feel about this type of ebook "sharing"? It's similar to lending a copy of a pbook to someone to read, but at the same time it's an EXACT copy, there's no wear and tear, it can be distributed an infinite number of times, and it can be read simultaneously by an infinite number of users. Edits be here: Please try not to bring piracy into this. And by this I mean don't start a 30 page thread where the two sides of the issue froth at the mouth and one screams "theft" while the other screams "unfair". I feel this is a different issue, where one person is offering to distribute a book to a book club for reading and discussion. I think it changes the moral reasoning involved. Last edited by queentess; 12-14-2010 at 08:45 PM. |
12-13-2010, 05:56 PM | #2 |
Aes Sedai
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I have been noticing this. I am not sure people understand sometimes. I have offered (before I knew better) to share ebooks on a group, and then I realized I couldn't anyway because of drm restrictions. I know somebody else that really believed it was legal to download ebooks because they didn't have DRM on them.
I have lent an ebook to somebody after I got more savvy, but I didn't do it to give them a free copy, I did it because I knew they would probably never buy it and I was dying for them to try the book. Then I got them hooked and they went and bought their own copies. I have noticed in one group people are offering pdf's left, right, and center. and one girl is always talking about downloading books. I just ignore it. It is going to happen and eventually if they keep talking about it they will find themselves in trouble. It's not like I am entirely perfect, but I like to support the authors, especially if they are more indy. If somebody can't get the title at their library and they can't afford to buy it, maybe it would be ok to share for discussion purposes. At least with the Nook we can do this but unfortunately the restrictions suck (only ever loaned once and for 14 days). Last edited by Care; 12-13-2010 at 06:00 PM. |
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12-13-2010, 10:56 PM | #3 |
You kids get off my lawn!
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I think sharing an ebook with a reading group is stretching the boundaries of "fair play". I share print books with a few friends, so I think it's "fair" to share ebooks with those same few friends. But a reading group (especially online where you don't know how many people are participating) seems extreme to me.
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12-13-2010, 11:16 PM | #4 |
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Yeah, maybe I'm biased, but sounds to me like that's going over the line.
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12-14-2010, 12:13 AM | #5 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Ebook publishers & authors are going to have to figure out a way to allow this, because "share book with a friend" is deeply ingrained in literary culture. That it's currently quasi-legal at best (the fair use argument has to stretch pretty far to allow it), means it's mostly underground. Publishers & authors aren't able to get the benefit of new readers they way they always could from those who buy books at yard sales or get a friend's used copy. They have no way of knowing how far word-of-mouth support has gone, and no easy way of advertising to those people.
Publishers and ebook stores have worked very, very hard to convince people "it's just like a book! Except it's on your screen!" to get past the initial resistance people had; one of the consequences of "it's a book!" instead of "it's a digital file, like a bit of software, that you need our special text-reader program to run," is that people will try to treat it like a book. And books get shared. I don't know what the solution is; there's no easy way to allow "sharing with up to 4 people." (Sharing every book with the same 4 people, all of whom use the same account, is not the same thing at all.) And sharing ebooks can cut into profits in ways that sharing pbooks generally doesn't. But most people don't want to destroy their favorite author by removing all their profits; they don't want to distribute that book through 30 torrents to a thousand computers. They want to hand the book to their best friend when they're done reading it, just like they've always done for pbooks. Attempting to make that a shameful immoral act will either (1) be ignored or (2) convince people that e-reading is obviously an entirely different action from "real reading." |
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12-14-2010, 06:30 AM | #6 |
The Introvert
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I see no reason why not to share?
They also created a poll to find out how many Nook users are out there to do it via Nook. Whoever is fighting sharing ebooks, imposing DRM, improbable prices - will loose eventually. They must accept this fact. Regardless how they fight they will loose. It is only a matter of time. There is no way to stop file copying. They have to find another way to promote buying ebooks. Charging DRM-infected books at hardback edition prices with no universal ebook format undermine any hopes of sell ebooks and making money out of it. |
12-14-2010, 06:40 AM | #7 |
Indie Advocate
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I have this issue myself. My sister and mother are both avid readers and up until now we have shared our paperbacks with each other.
In fact, just the other day my mother mentioned that she had run out of books and I made a mercy dash over to her with some choice paperbacks in my library that I thought she would like. And then there's my partner. I just can't imagine having that little sharing relationship blocked by DRM etc.. Before it all really comes to head I still have to wait until my mother and partner move towards ebooks in general - and then it's a matter of working out where I stand. Regards Caleb |
12-14-2010, 10:59 AM | #8 | |
Literacy = Understanding
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Quote:
So how do you avoid the piracy question? Isn't it integral to the act under discussion? |
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12-14-2010, 11:04 AM | #9 | |
Literacy = Understanding
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Quote:
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12-14-2010, 12:36 PM | #10 |
Feral Underclass
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Is it a book that isn't commercially available worldwide in ebook form?
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12-14-2010, 12:53 PM | #11 | ||
Reading is sexy
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Quote:
I do think this is a different situation though. This isn't one person putting up a torrent and a multitude of people downloading it. Sharing books is a common practice among friends, and the whole point of book clubs is to share books you enjoy and generate discussion. Sharing pbooks is so common, that I think many people don't even realize that making a couple copies of ebooks to send to friends (or share with people who can't get the book in time for book discussion) is piracy. It's beyond knowingly pirating and into "common sense" practice, where the common person attempts to treat the "purchase" of an ebook the same way they treat the purchase of a pbook. How can the publishers even begin to combat something that is so ingrained in people? Quote:
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12-14-2010, 01:00 PM | #12 |
Reading is sexy
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12-14-2010, 01:40 PM | #13 |
Aes Sedai
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It would be nice if we could share our ebooks like the Nook lending, but be able to lend it more than once. How many times have I lent out my physical copy of the first Wheel of Time book? Enough times that I have bought it three times because it keeps falling apart from myself and others reading it. Why would I only want to lend a book out once if I really love it?
Then there is the problem of formats. Will we ever be able to share books across the platforms? I doubt it. But it would be nice. |
12-14-2010, 02:11 PM | #14 |
Wizard
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Piracy isn't about the number of people you share it with. Sharing it with one, when not legal, is piracy. I don't see how you can divorce this thread from the piracy concern. If I have a cousin with a hard drive of MP3's and I copy some of them for my personal use that is piracy. You seem to think the number of people you share it with makes a difference. It does, but only for the damages award in court, not the ethics.
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12-14-2010, 02:11 PM | #15 |
Can one read too much?
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Regarding this very specific example (instance), those could almost be considered "promotional" copies, no?
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