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So you wanna explain the details of what that might be, how it might work?
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Predicting the future is a mug's game. Who would have predicted the eventual model(s) of the motion picture industry in 1895?
I can suggest a solution. Legal laws creating the concept of an e-library. Such institutions are regulated, have to keep records of what is borrowed and compensate authors for each time a book is borrowed (which would probably have to connect in some fashion to the typical retail price on the high street when borrowed). More than what libraries currently give them, possibly with some maximum limit (ideally the limit would be defined by the number of members of a library). These books have to have some form of DRM on them (for practical purposes it doesn't matter how good it is, of if its cracked. Most people won't bother, any more than they steal library books). If publishers sell books in a region
in any format (paper, electronic, doesn't matter) they cannot prevent libraries from lending their e-books.
You'd also need to allow publishers to negotiate more favorable terms (to libraries) if they so wished, to allow for alternative business models to evolve.
Then at the same time you aggressively persecute illegal filesharing and filesharing sites. Even if the risk is low of being caught, most people aren't going to take it if there's a good enough alternative out there.