Quote:
Originally Posted by J. Strnad
With ebooks, you also don't have the right to republish it, which is what you're doing when you give a copy to someone. You aren't losing your own copy, you're making a new one and distributing it, which you don't have the right to do. Now, if you could somehow give your electrons to someone else, that would be a different matter!
Hence, DRM as a way to cut down on people making copies for friends. In order to reduce the number of people who get the book for free, publishers make the book less useful to those who pay for it.
My book is DRM-free. I'll take my income from the people who figure that Risen is worth five bucks and accept the fact that a lot more people will read it for free. I'll do that rather than cripple it with DRM which makes it less useful to those who pay the $5. I can't serve my paying customers well and cut off the freeloaders, so I'm choosing to serve my paying customers well.
|
You can sell it by giving your electrons to someone else. Give someone a copy, delete yours. Done. That takes honesty though.
I'm glad that you do yours DRM-free. It never stops anyone anyway. It's always defeated, and it only hurts paying customers.