|  12-27-2011, 04:40 PM | #16 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 2,888 Karma: 5875940 Join Date: Dec 2007 Device: PRS505, 600, 350, 650, Nexus 7, Note III, iPad 4 etc | Quote: 
 And you'll also see that the primary reason, for geo rights, dates to the fact that publishers weren't multi-nationals until relatively recently hence an author would have been an idiot to sell world rights to a company that only distributed in the US and eBooks didn't exist seriously until recently... now we need the facts of multi-nationality and eBooks to be taken into account but you can't just scrap existing contractual requirements... it's another thing that will take some time to catch up to the real world... Oh yes, translators do get compensated... they get paid to do a job like anyone else and that's it... | |
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 05:02 PM | #17 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 1,358 Karma: 5766642 Join Date: Aug 2010 Device: Nook | Quote: 
 Same is true of buying an ebook from Amazon, but in the case of a paper book, you're talking about a physical product, for which there is a couple of centuries of case law regarding the first sale doctrine. Once the wholesaler owns a copy of a physical object, the publisher has very little control over what they can do with it by law, and contracts can't modify that. Extensive case law. The same principle really can't be applied to ebooks (or any other digital media) because of the trivial nature of making infinite perfect copies. Hence, the current trent towards thinking of ebook purchases is licenses rather than purchases (while maintaining the financial advantages to the publisher of treating it as a purchase - that's where greed and stupidity come in). Publishers are trying to preserve the best of the old business model, while screwing everybody out of everything from the new technology. And authors often (I suspect) have a very unrealistic expectation of what those magical world-wide rights are really worth, and their agents don't have much of a vested interest in teaching them better. | |
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 05:15 PM | #18 | |||||
| Guru            Posts: 973 Karma: 4269175 Join Date: Apr 2010 Location: Europe Device: Pocketbook Basic 613 | Quote: 
 Quote: 
 Quote: 
 Quote: 
 Quote: 
 | |||||
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 05:22 PM | #19 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 6,686 Karma: 12595249 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Madrid, Spain Device: Kobo Clara/Aura One/Forma,XiaoMI 5, iPad, Huawei MediaPad, YotaPhone 2 | Quote: 
 | |
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 05:42 PM | #20 | |
| Grand Master of Flowers            Posts: 2,201 Karma: 8389072 Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Naptown Device: Kindle PW, Kindle 3 (aka Keyboard), iPhone, iPad 3 (not for reading) | Quote: 
 How can it be the fault of the publisher when the publisher doesn't have the rights to sell a book in certain markets? If - you use a non-US example - Patrick Sueskind sells the European rights to "Das Parfum" to Diogenes, how could it be Diogenes fault that the book isn't available in New Zealand when they don't operation in N.Z., and even if they did, do not have the right to sell the book in N.Z. because the author didn't give them that right? | |
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 06:05 PM | #21 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,196 Karma: 70314280 Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Atlanta, GA Device: iPad Pro, iPad mini, Kobo Aura, Amazon paperwhite, Sony PRS-T2 | 
			
			Keep in mind that the reading public is _not_ the customer for the publishers, the book shops are. In addition, until fairly recently, the copyright laws were different from country to country and copyrights were not necessarily honored in between countries (example, the first paperback version of LOTR's in the US was an unauthorized edition by Ace.)  Things are slowly changing.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 06:11 PM | #22 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 1,358 Karma: 5766642 Join Date: Aug 2010 Device: Nook | Quote: 
 And geo-restrictions are rooted in contracts signed by both author and publisher, and were included to protect the author's interests, not the publishers. Never said that wasn't part of it. Just that it's caused by authors as much as (or perhaps even more) by publishers. | |
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 06:15 PM | #23 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 1,358 Karma: 5766642 Join Date: Aug 2010 Device: Nook | Quote: 
 | |
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 06:20 PM | #24 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 1,358 Karma: 5766642 Join Date: Aug 2010 Device: Nook | Quote: 
 | |
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 08:23 PM | #25 | 
| e-reading since 2008            Posts: 197 Karma: 112730 Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: Hinesville Georgia Device: Nook STR, Sony PRS-T1 | 
			
			I don't know the ins and outs of geogaphic restriction for ebooks. What I do know, is there are long-dead authors who have ebooks for sale in the UK that I cannot buy in the US. Not sure why. To top it off, one of the authors I have been seeking out, Gordon Dickson, is an American author and has plenty of pbooks available. His ebooks are primarily in the UK, which I am prevented from purchasing due to these stupid geographic restrictions. Something doesn't make sense in this. Its supposed to be a global market. I've ordered physical goods from Europe a few times in the past, and twice from China. But an electronic ebook that can be downloaded? PROHIBITED.  Vic | 
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 09:24 PM | #26 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 2,888 Karma: 5875940 Join Date: Dec 2007 Device: PRS505, 600, 350, 650, Nexus 7, Note III, iPad 4 etc | Quote: 
  And what's supposed to be a global market??? Nothing is global until it's set to be so, just because the internet goes round the world and there are many multinationals, doesn't make a global market for everything... just a talked up myth... Last edited by elcreative; 12-27-2011 at 09:26 PM. | |
|   |   | 
|  12-27-2011, 11:03 PM | #27 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 4,538 Karma: 264065402 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Taiwan Device: HP Touchpad, Sony Duo 13, Lumia 920, Kobo Aura HD | 
			
			It is a mess, and sadly I agree that it won't get any better soon. But let us count our blessings that we can easily get around those restrictions.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  12-28-2011, 01:26 AM | #28 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 3,413 Karma: 13369310 Join Date: May 2008 Location: Launceston, Tasmania Device: Sony PRS T3, Kobo Glo, Kindle Touch, iPad, Samsung SB 2 tablet | |
|   |   | 
|  12-28-2011, 01:28 AM | #29 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 4,538 Karma: 264065402 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Taiwan Device: HP Touchpad, Sony Duo 13, Lumia 920, Kobo Aura HD | |
|   |   | 
|  12-28-2011, 01:33 AM | #30 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 9,707 Karma: 32763414 Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Krewerd Device: Pocketbook Inkpad 4 Color; Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 | Quote: 
 It gets weirder. Why can't I even buy electronic (English!) books from an UK based firm? I mean, I'm in Europe, and last I checked, the UK was in Europe... And it's not like our local publishers publish books in English... | |
|   |   | 
|  | 
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread | 
| 
 | 
|  Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post | 
| Have geographic restrictions down under reduced? | kiwipippa | General Discussions | 2 | 04-25-2011 05:08 AM | 
| geographic restrictions at Fictionwise | Margrete | General Discussions | 548 | 12-05-2010 01:03 PM | 
| Another Geographic Restrictions rant | AlexBell | General Discussions | 26 | 06-30-2010 07:26 PM | 
| What's the point of Geographic restrictions from a publisher's perspective? | GlenBarrington | News | 36 | 02-13-2010 03:38 AM | 
| Fictionwise Geographic Restrictions | Blue Tyson | News | 15 | 09-28-2009 06:44 AM |