|  04-24-2012, 01:04 PM | #1 | 
| Fanatic            Posts: 509 Karma: 3455210 Join Date: Apr 2007 Device: Rocket, Nook ST, Kobo WiFi, Kindle PW | 
				
				Tor, a MacMillan imprint going DRM free
			 
			
			http://www.tor.com/blogs/2012/04/tor...to-go-drm-free I've had my eye an a few of their books, but since I'm unwilling to buy books with DRM on them I've gotten them from the library instead. Hopefully they actually go through with it. Tor tried to go with Baen Webscriptions years ago and had it nixed by their MacMillan overlords. Greg Weeks | 
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|  04-24-2012, 01:08 PM | #2 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,516 Karma: 2567610 Join Date: Oct 2009 Device: Kindles - Keyboard, Fire, 2-US, iPhone, iPAD | 
			
			hmmmmm  - Macmillan tests selling to Kindle users outside of Amazon?
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|  04-24-2012, 01:19 PM | #3 | 
| Tea Enthusiast            Posts: 8,554 Karma: 75384937 Join Date: Jul 2010 Location: Somewhere in the USA Device: Kindle1, Kindle DX Graphite, K3 3G, IPad 3, PW2 | 
			
			It is only a test if BN, Kobo, Sony, and others sell both EPub and Mobi DRM Free books. Amazon will allow the books to be sold without DRM on the Amazon site. Unless another store sells the Mobi version at a lower price than Amazon, I will buy from Amazon.
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|  04-24-2012, 01:41 PM | #4 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,516 Karma: 2567610 Join Date: Oct 2009 Device: Kindles - Keyboard, Fire, 2-US, iPhone, iPAD | 
			
			Well, if Barnes and Noble (or another retailer) offered DRM free ePub along with a simple easy guide on how to convert to mobi, that'd be kind of interesting.  Or if they sold the ePub and offered to convert it for you and email it to your Kindle address.  LOL  I bet that'd get Jeff Bezos's attention. I can't see Barnes and Noble having the ability to price cut Amazon anyway but there's been a lot of writing lately about DRM needing to go for Publishers to break outside of the hold Amazon has on the market. It's interesting to see one of the Big 6 floating this out there. | 
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|  04-24-2012, 01:43 PM | #5 | 
| Evangelist            Posts: 456 Karma: 1044878 Join Date: Apr 2009 Device: Kindle Paperwhite 4 | 
			
			I know that the people at Tor have been wanting to do this for years (going back to their aborted partnership with Webscriptions). I'm ecstatic to see it finally come to fruition.
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|  04-24-2012, 01:44 PM | #6 | 
| Guru            Posts: 826 Karma: 18573626 Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Touch, Nexus 7 (2013) | 
			
			This is a great step, one that I really hope more publishers take.  Maybe this is a sign that publishers are finally waking up to the hard lesson that the record industry already learned:  DRM is ineffective at stopping pirates and great at annoying customers.
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|  04-24-2012, 01:53 PM | #7 | 
| (he/him/his)            Posts: 12,322 Karma: 80074820 Join Date: Jul 2010 Location: Sunshine Coast, BC Device: Oasis (Gen3),Paperwhite (Gen10), Voyage, Paperwhite(orig), iPad Air M3 | 
			
			This will actually move me towards buying a few TOR books since I've essentially avoided them. The combination of over-priced plus DRM was just too annoying, so I kept my SF buying to Baen, primarily. Obviously, I'd like to see them move their prices more inline with Baen as well, but this is an important and much welcomed step. (And it's not that DRM kept me from doing what I needed to do with a book - Apprentice Alf took care of that - but it was the principle.)
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|  04-24-2012, 02:12 PM | #8 | 
| Guru            Posts: 808 Karma: 2260766 Join Date: Apr 2008 Device: Kindle Oasis 2 | 
			
			Even though I have a Kindle, with DRM free I'm still going to buy where the best price is available.  As long as Tor is using agency pricing, there won't be any price difference, and therefore no reason not to buy from Amazon.
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|  04-24-2012, 02:15 PM | #9 | 
| Guru            Posts: 895 Karma: 4383958 Join Date: Nov 2007 Device: na | 
			
			With the exception of some too good to refuse offers, I've avoided buying DRM'd books which has meant I've been making do mostly with freebies and Baen, always nice to be able to add another potential source of books   The reason I want ebooks to go DRM free is that it removes the need for A.Alf to keep his scripts up to date, if he ever stops and nobody else steps up, we're stuck. Also, it makes it much simpler to recommend people buy a given reader because it's better hardware or has better value added features along with instructions on how to convert books from other stores. A better situation than, "all your current books are from XYZ, so although this reader would suit you better, you'll either have to free your books or buy another reader from XYZ". | 
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|  04-24-2012, 02:26 PM | #10 | 
| Tea Enthusiast            Posts: 8,554 Karma: 75384937 Join Date: Jul 2010 Location: Somewhere in the USA Device: Kindle1, Kindle DX Graphite, K3 3G, IPad 3, PW2 | 
			
			Apprentice Alf stopped a while back. The scripts that are posted at that site are developed by others, many of whom post here. I believe that this is posted on the site but I cannot remember where. Removing the DRM is great, I like that. The only way it can hurt Amazon is if that means that other sites sell mobi books and at a cheaper price then Amazon. The reality is that most people are not going to take extra steps to convert even when they don't have to strip the DRM when they can buy it in the correct format. One possible downside for folks could be that Amazon decides to sell the EPub versions at a lower price and draws people from other e-readers to Amazon's store due to lower pricing. | 
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|  04-24-2012, 02:29 PM | #11 | 
| Wizzard            Posts: 11,517 Karma: 33048258 Join Date: Mar 2010 Location: Roundworld Device: Kindle 2 International, Sony PRS-T1, BlackBerry PlayBook, Acer Iconia | 
			
			Great news. It almost makes me forgive them for price-gouging Canadians by inflating their discount promo things an extra dollar for us per title. I hope they also reduce the prices or at least allow coupons and such as some other apparently-Agency publishers do, with user-adjustable fixed store-list pricing (Smashwords et al.). | 
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|  04-24-2012, 02:34 PM | #12 | 
| Evangelist            Posts: 456 Karma: 1044878 Join Date: Apr 2009 Device: Kindle Paperwhite 4 | 
			
			There is one reason not to buy from Amazon: if you buy an ePub elsewhere, you'll get higher-resolution images and (unless the publisher is using KF8 already) better styles & any custom fonts the publisher used.
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|  04-24-2012, 02:35 PM | #13 | |||
| Guru            Posts: 895 Karma: 4383958 Join Date: Nov 2007 Device: na | Quote: 
 Quote: 
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 Amazon could try to sell to non-kindle owners and other stores could try to sell to kindle owners, that imo is a great thing for customers  Hardware readers could also then be purchased because you like one more than the other rather than based on which store you've got to buy from (assuming you don't want to constantly free the books) One thing it does for publishers is reduce the impact of Amazon turning around and saying agree to these terms or we're not selling your books. Since they'd still have a way to sell to kindle customers albeit with a minor extra side-load or email step. Not saying it eliminates the impact, it'd still be a big one for some time most likely, but it wouldn't be the end of the world for them. Last edited by JoeD; 04-24-2012 at 02:38 PM. | |||
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|  04-24-2012, 02:35 PM | #14 | 
| Tea Enthusiast            Posts: 8,554 Karma: 75384937 Join Date: Jul 2010 Location: Somewhere in the USA Device: Kindle1, Kindle DX Graphite, K3 3G, IPad 3, PW2 | 
			
			And that higher resolution goes away when converted to Mobi and placed on a KIndle. So why should I buy and convert and EPUb? Not to mention, 99% of the books I read do not have images so I could care less about image quality. | 
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|  04-24-2012, 02:44 PM | #15 | |
| Loves Ellipsis...            Posts: 1,554 Karma: 7899232 Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Washington, DC Device: Kobo Wifi (broken), nook STR (returned), Kobo Touch, Sony T1 | Quote: 
 I've been boycotting Agency6 (including Tor) so this makes me very happy! DRM removal is much more important to me than lower prices. I'd pay a couple extra dollars for DRM free books, regardless. | |
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