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Old 07-23-2009, 08:57 AM   #142
PKFFW
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ficbot View Post
Is there 'value' in a digital work depends on how the digital work is presented. Is the $4-5 I pay for multiformat titles on Fictionwise worth it? In some cases, yes. In some cases, no. I would like a sample chapter to be mandatory so I can be a better judge, the same way I could read a few pages in a bricks and mortar bookstore, but caveat emptor, I suppose. For the most part, I am quite happy to pay for the book, go to my bookshelf and download it in the format I choose.

Start slapping all sorts of restrictions on it though, and its value diminishes. Only read on this many devices or on this specific platform? Encumbered by DRM I must go through manual labour to remove? And then they complain that more people don't want to pay for it?

We need one of two things to happen. Either everything needs to go multiformat, so one can easily buy it, download it in the format they choose and away they go (and they own it, can come back to their bookshelf later and download again if need be, can read on whatever devices they own etc.) OR we need to have a common, widely accepted format that everyone uses, and it will be like iTunes where no matter what device you have, you can download the item, load it on with one click, and be done.

Is it possible some people will still 'steal' the books? Of course it is. Nobody can ever prevent that. The corner grocer has to budget into his year a certain amount of loss to teenagers shoplifting candy bars, it's the same thing. But if you start with a mutual respect where you offer a useable product at a fair price and you make it easy for your customers to enjoy their purchase in the legal ways they choose (e.g. on whatever device they want, as many times as they want etc) then most people, as iTunes has shown us, really will behave like sensible, rational and fair people.

I blame the 'industry' for setting up this adversarial position. They treat us not like customers but like thieves-in-waiting, and they view their job not so much as 'suppliers of quality books' than as 'enforcers who must thwart us from being criminals.'
Totally agree with everything you say.

With one caveat........people will act like sensible, rational and fair people only so long as creative efforts(ie: ebooks) are deemed to have some fair and reasonable value that they think it is right to pay. If the idea that these efforts are valueless then people will think it sensible, rational and fair to simply acquire it for free since it has no value.

Cheers,
PKFFW
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