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#1 |
Grand Sorcerer
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eBook protest on CNN frontpage
It's an iReport video (which I can't watch at work, but I thought I'd share). It looks like they are protesting the Author's Guild. If someone watches it post what it is about
![]() http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-241057 |
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#2 |
Bookaholic
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There are a few more of them (didn't watch them)...
http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-241054 http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-241056 http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-240713 All are posted by professirx and appear to deal with a petition by the National Spinal Cord Injury Association. http://spinalcord.org/news.php?dep=1&page=0&list=2240 |
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#3 |
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Too bad they don't know that in the US it is legal for them to strip the DRM so the eBooks can be read via the Kindle.
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#4 |
Wizard
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#5 |
Wizard
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This is great news awesome!
I personally fine text-to-speech (TSS) an excellent feature and found it a crime to society that the authors guild staunchly opposed this right. This technology not only helps the disabled, but also assist in teaching children who are having a difficult time learning how to read... even as bad as the synthesized voice is it still pronounced the words accurately--well mostly. I also use it for leisure and play the TTS when I want to continue reading my book but cannot for instance when I'm driving, working out, etc... The author's greed blinds them form the truth. TSS will never equal audio books and their audio sales will go up as a result of folks wishing to listen to a professional production. Also I actually consume more books because of this feature. Amazon has provided a great vehicle for us as consumers to pressure the AG to enable TSS. By allowing the author's to chose whether they want to enable TTS or not the consumer has the right to purchase the authors work based on that feature. Personally I would like to see a boycott of authors who chose to disable the TSS. =X= |
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#6 |
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What about if it's the publisher and not the author's disabling the TTS? How would you know the difference?
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#7 |
Evangelist
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LMAO, this is real.
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#8 | |
Wizard
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Quote:
If the publisher is responsible for disabling TTS then they will feel more of the sting since it will effect all of their eBooks, and the author can also participate in the applying pressure to the publisher to remove TSS. If it is the author who disabled TTS then only the consumer pressure is felt only by that author. =X= |
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#9 |
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Text deleted due to poster's remorse. Sorry.
Last edited by Fledchen; 04-08-2009 at 03:55 PM. |
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#10 | |
Jeffrey A. Carver
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The yes/no will have to come through the publisher, and that might or might not reflect the author's wishes. To some extent, it will depend on people looking at their contracts and determining what rights they've granted to whom, and how it's worded. Contracts can be amended, but it's not a simple or quick process.
I've already told my agent I want TTS enabled. But I don't have any audiobook contracts. If I did, I'd have to study the wording to see if I could approve that without violating my agreement with someone else. Anyway, here's the Authors Guild statement issued yesterday: Quote:
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#11 |
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The AG's statement, of course, assumes without discussion that TTS implicates "audio rights" in the first place, which is what they want everyone to simply accept. I would argue that there's a very good case to be made that TTS does implicate audio rights at all.
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#12 | |
Wizard
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Quote:
Someone thinks they can squeeze extra money by claiming that TTS is an incremental right. If you take this to court you have to prove that it violates "audio rights" and you'd lose. Instead you write it into contracts and get a bunch of people to sign it. Now you can claim in court that "of course it's an incremental right I own, all these people signed contracts recognizing it as such." I think the Author's guild was played the fall guys for the above game of some publisher(s) and they're taking all the bad PR. The sad thing is that even if they win nobody is going to pay any more money for an ebook with TTS enabled vs disabled. I think of it like a bakery asking me if I wanted to buy the right to be able to toast the bread because if you then butter it and sprinkle sugar on it, "then it will cut into my donut sales". Even if they win this as an incremental right it's worth $0. The only party that wins is the DRM vendor because now you have to pay them to manage your $0 "TTS right" that you signed into a contract. |
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#13 |
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It's like the electric company wanting to charge me more if I choose greener energy. They should be charging the same or less for greener energy to get people to want to switch.
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#14 |
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@Jeffrey--
Thanks for putting up the Author's Guild's press release. Until I read this, and spoke to an author about audio rights last weekend, I didn't really understand what was at stake with the TTS thing. For an author it can make the difference between being able to put chicken and broccoli on the table, versus living on ramen. Now I understand better why some of them feel so strongly about this. The audio book rights are worth serious money to them. I think the idea in the press release that TTS should be available for the blind, and that print-disabled people should be able to get Kindles that override TTS restrictions is a good one. If you made those Kindles without e-Ink screens (what good does the screen do a blind person anyway?) and got the TTS to work with the menus and put braille on the keys, you could pretty much guarantee that their use would be restricted to print-disabled people, and they wouldn't be used by sighted people to sneak around the TTS restrictions. I mean, I like having my book read itself to me while I'm driving, but I wouldn't want it to *only* be read-aloud; I'd rather read for myself when I can, as it's so much quicker. |
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#15 | |
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Quote:
Also keep in mind that less than 10% of legally blind people can read braille. It's better to have a simple keyboard with an easily-memorized control system and audible menus than to try to label every button with a specific function. |
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