Authors Guild Threatens Amazon For Daring To Allow Library Lending Of Ebooks
from the how-out-of-touch-are-they dept
Ah, the Authors Guild. I don't think there's any group out there that has done more to hold back authors and important innovations that those authors need. Any new technology or innovation that comes along, the Authors Guild reflexively freaks out about it. Full text search to help you find books you might want to buy? Not allowed. Letting ebook readers use crappy text-to-speech to read aloud? The Authors Guild makes up a mythical "audio right," and threatens to sue. Then, of course, this is the same Authors Guild who is suing Google for scanning books and suing five universities for making it easier for students to access orphaned works.So I guess it should come as no surprise that the group is now freaking out about Amazon's extremely limited "lending library" feature for ebooks. The service lets Kindle owners "borrow" one book a month for free. To appease potentially angry authors and publishers, Amazon made it clear that this doesn't actually impact revenue to publishers.
The "vast majority" are there following an agreement with the publishers to include the books for a fixed fee, while "in some cases", Amazon said it was purchasing the title under standard wholesale terms each time it is borrowed, "as a no-risk trial to demonstrate to publishers the incremental growth and revenue opportunity that this new service presents".The Authors Guild's response is to continue to portray itself as out of touch and clueless on important innovations. It suggested that none of the books in the "lending library" are there legitimately. And it doesn't care that Amazon still pays when the books are borrowed. Because the Authors Guild's out of touch views also seem to include a scorched earth provision, where any new innovation they don't like must be destroyed if it ever so slightly changes the way people enjoy books.
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Filed Under: ebooks, lending
Companies: amazon, authors guild
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No-win situation.
On the other hand, this is going to happen. They can complain about the march of technology as much as they want but if the RIAA and MPAA couldn't stymy progress they don't stand a chance.
On the gripping hand, they have always shown themselves to be adversarial to authors and consumers alike and with technology where it is I wouldn't mind seeing creators streamline things by hiring freelance editors (my girlfriend does this), freelance artists (my brother does this), and a publicity company. The one-time fees may be a bit hairy, but I wonder if at the end of the day the cut an author gives to Amazon would be less than that which he gives to another publishing house and the guild.
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Block their payment processing!!
Problem solved.
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Every "tiny" new step threatens a TOTAL loss of control, though!
But as a sop to you guys: I'm still against effectively perpetual copyright. The deal was 28 years or whatever, so take all the old stuff that you wish, in any format.
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Re: Every "tiny" new step threatens a TOTAL loss of control, though!
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Re: Every "tiny" new step threatens a TOTAL loss of control, though!
Ah Blue, you're adorable. Everything is OH SO SIMPLE when you have a point to make about it, and we're all dolts for not seeing it - but everything is OH SO COMPLEX every time someone else makes a point, and they are a dolt for thinking it's simple.
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Re: Every "tiny" new step threatens a TOTAL loss of control, though!
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Never mind that the "licensing" cost is the same as the physical purchasing cost. Never mind that the AG is getting PAID for this library. Seems to me like the AG has a good thing here and is about to bite the hand that feeds it.
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Re: Every "tiny" new step threatens a TOTAL loss of control, though!
I particularly wouldn't like it if say, Stephen King (my favourite author) published a new hardback and said that anytime I read it, since he's the all-mighty author, he hereby dictates that I have to be strapped to a machine that will electrocute me if someone looks over my shoulder. Or I sneeze too loud.
Now, I want you to read that, and then try and explain to me again why total control is the only justifiable arrangement.
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"publsihers"
Should be "publishers"
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Re:
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ah yes
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Even worse than it sounds
The $79/year premium account lets you "rent" an ebook once per month for "free". It's not actually for "free". Amazon actually pays the authors the FULL price that they normally get from Amazon as if someone purchased the book.
From the authors perspective, they get paid as if the book was sold.
I really don't see the issue. It has to be a control thing.
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Wait......................
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Re:
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Re: Re: Every "tiny" new step threatens a TOTAL loss of control, though!
This has nothing to do with copyright! Amazon bought the book and now they are lending it. This is first sale, the same law that protects libraries. Wake up!
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Re: Re: Every "tiny" new step threatens a TOTAL loss of control, though!
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Think about this ...
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Re: Even worse than it sounds
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Re:
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Re: Every "tiny" new step threatens a TOTAL loss of control, though!
Libraries are killing the book industry.
Oh, wait. They didn't, and they won't. Your tiny new step threatening a TOTAL loss of control is a joke. Moving on.
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Re: ah yes
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Re: No-win situation.
The funny thing is, this has nothing to do with the services they're objecting to.
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Class Action Lawsuit in the works?
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Every "Tiny" New Step
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Re: No-win situation.
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Re:
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Who are these people?
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