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Old 02-10-2009, 12:37 PM   #90
amgoforth
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Posts: 196
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Odessa, Texas
Device: 2 Kindles, 2 Nooks, 2 Kobos, Ipad.
Quote:
Originally Posted by bigmoney View Post
As long as there are hungry minds and talented people, literature will be fine. Most writers don't have a problem with DRM or the lack of it, only publishers stuck in the 20th century do.

One of these days I read the following at Time magazine, in an article about the future of publishing:

Daniel Suarez, a software consultant in Los Angeles, sent his techno-thriller Daemon to 48 literary agents. No go. So he self-published instead. Bit by bit, bloggers got behind Daemon. Eventually Penguin noticed and bought it and a sequel for a sum in the high six figures. "I really see a future in doing that," Suarez says, "where agencies would monitor the performance of self-published books, in a sort of Darwinian selection process, and see what bubbles to the surface. I think of it as crowd-sourcing the manuscript-submission process."
I have a feeling this is how the future will look like, writers will put their work straight on the Net and let word-of-mouth do the job. The cream will rise to the top.
I hope so, but I am worried about it.
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