Google Wants To Rent Books Online?
from the stage-II dept
With all the arguing over Google's plan to scan various library books (not to be confused with their Google Print offering -- which is slightly different), it looks like Google is trying to appease publishers in another way: by setting up a business model that lets publishers potentially profit from online book reading. The idea, apparently, is to rent out books online, a week at a time for 10% of the cover price. Consider it something of a response to Amazon's plan to sell books by the page online. Of course, the publishers who already aren't happy with Google balked at the price. Apparently getting only 10% of the cover price for a book that costs them nothing to print, bind and ship for only one week's viewing, just isn't enough. If true, this is incredible short-sighted on the publisher's part. Not that it's clear very many people would want to rent books for a week online (especially when the same books are available for free at the library -- often for longer than a week). However, if the reasoning really is because of the price, than the publishers have bigger problems to worry about. Assuming (perhaps a big assumption) people really are interested in this offering, publishers would make a lot more money, as just a few rentals more than covers the price of the book at almost no cost to the publisher. They wouldn't even need to rent out a book 10 times, since only a single book is needed for scanning, and thus, they're saving money on the cost side. No wonder these execs went into publishing. Their math skills seem a bit rusty.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Making the World Easier for Demagogues
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Either way, Google won't affect this process. They'll just lessen the amount of royalties the author recieves.
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Rent books on line
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