On making ebook piracy inevitable
Simon & Schuster have announced that they will be delaying the ebook releases of at least 35 of their big name releases in 2010. Doyce Testerman has said pretty much what I have to say on the matter, so why don’t you go see what he has to say.
This decision, which I fully believe is grounded in nothing less than a toddler-like desire to cling to the once-profitable but entirely outdated publishing structures of the past, actually creates an environment where, from a ebook-pirate’s perspective, it is a good idea to steal from them, because there is no legitimate competition in that space.
via The Future, the Past, Willful Ignorance, and Simon and Schuster – doyce testerman.
Basically, Simon & Schuster (Stephen King) and Hatchette (Stephanie Meyer) are forcing users who want – or need – to read books via ebook format to either do without or turn to P2P networks and download pirate scans. For me personally, this means nothing. I haven’t bought a paper book in a decade. If it’s not available from Amazon or eReader.com, I simply don’t buy it. I have hundreds of books that I can read instead. But the author won’t get my money, either, and that’s a shame.
I think it’s worth noting that I just bought a copy of Earth by David Brin on eReader, even though I’ve had a pirate scan of it for years. Why? Because the scan sucks as a reading experience. It’s badly OCRed, meaning the line and paragraph breaks are in the wrong places and it’s rife with typos. Even though I could get the story for free, it was worth $8 for a professional presentation, and cleaning up the scan would have taken up far, far more than $8 worth of my time.
People will buy ebooks if they’re priced to provide a good value for the content, but you have to give them the chance in the first place.
Did you know that a vast section of the fictionwise and ereader library is now not available to customers outside the US? This is ever since B&N took over. 90% of my wishlist suddenly became unavailable to me.
http://www.ereader.com/help/GeographicRestriction…
That’s 8 years of my buying ebooks from India being appreciated by the publishers.