|  10-15-2014, 08:07 AM | #226 | |
| monkey on the fringe            Posts: 45,851 Karma: 158733736 Join Date: May 2010 Location: Seattle Metro Device: Moto E6, Echo Show | Quote: 
  Funny how format shifting is condoned and lending is condemned   | |
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|  10-15-2014, 08:19 AM | #227 | 
| Resident Curmudgeon            Posts: 80,727 Karma: 150249619 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3 | |
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|  10-15-2014, 08:21 AM | #228 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,862 Karma: 68407974 Join Date: Dec 2011 Location: Australia Device: Kobo Libra 2, iPadMini4, iPad4, MBP; support other Kobo/Kindles | 
			
			We did this part of the conversation already. Quote: 
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|  10-15-2014, 08:32 AM | #229 | |
| Addict            Posts: 265 Karma: 1135030 Join Date: Nov 2010 Location: England Device: Boox Go Color 7, Kobo Forma, Kindle Keyboard | Quote: 
 @anyone - So, if (by design or accident) an ebook is read by others on one of my devices, I'm possibly acting within the terms of a retailer like Amazon, but could still fall foul of copyright law? How, as a lay person, would I have any clue that Amazon's (insert any other retailer's name here) terms aren't necessarily legal? What a huge can of worms!  I have to wonder why I should care. In the end, if I go on Amazon and click a 'Buy' button for an ebook, as far as I'm concerned, I now own a copy. If I then believe Amazon's terms and happily lend that book to others, should I care or worry that I'm breaking any law?? The problem is far wider than just putting the onus on ME as a customer! Last edited by leaston; 10-15-2014 at 08:34 AM. | |
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|  10-15-2014, 08:47 AM | #230 | 
| eBook Enthusiast            Posts: 85,560 Karma: 93980341 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: UK Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6 | |
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|  10-15-2014, 08:52 AM | #231 | ||
| eBook Enthusiast            Posts: 85,560 Karma: 93980341 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: UK Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6 | Quote: 
 Quote: 
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|  10-15-2014, 08:53 AM | #232 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 28,880 Karma: 207000000 Join Date: Jan 2010 Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD | 
			
			I'm sure the publishers--who would love for the DRM to force you to have to rebuy the book in the new format--might not see it that way.   I myself, would dismiss the "loss of a sale" with either scenario (casual lending/format shifting) as entirely speculative (and unlikely). Another thing regarding the "loss of sale" mantra--in regard to lending--is that it ignores any potential (and possibly multiple) future "gain of sales" of an author's other (or future) books that such a lending can generate. Just as subjective/speculative as the "loss of a sale," of course, but still. Last edited by DiapDealer; 10-15-2014 at 09:04 AM. | 
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|  10-15-2014, 09:07 AM | #233 | |
| eBook Enthusiast            Posts: 85,560 Karma: 93980341 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: UK Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6 | Quote: 
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|  10-15-2014, 09:08 AM | #234 | 
| monkey on the fringe            Posts: 45,851 Karma: 158733736 Join Date: May 2010 Location: Seattle Metro Device: Moto E6, Echo Show | 
			
			It does! Format shifting is against the terms just as much as lending is. If you own a Kindle and a Kobo and wish to read the same book on both  devices, publishers fully expect to be paid for both versions. When you convert one of those formats to the other, you've just deprived the publisher of a sale.
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|  10-15-2014, 09:22 AM | #235 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 28,880 Karma: 207000000 Join Date: Jan 2010 Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD | Quote: 
 Of course I can't prove that book lending ultimately "pays it forward" -- any more than anyone can prove it results in lost sales -- but I know in my heart that it does. Probably in buckets if people would just relax and let it (especially if they're any good). The only authors who would be hurt are the ones readers don't feel very compelled to turn others onto (who probably had no realistic hopes for a solid fanbase in the first place). *shrugs* Last edited by DiapDealer; 10-15-2014 at 09:30 AM. | |
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|  10-15-2014, 09:35 AM | #236 | |
| Addict            Posts: 265 Karma: 1135030 Join Date: Nov 2010 Location: England Device: Boox Go Color 7, Kobo Forma, Kindle Keyboard | Quote: 
 My point was that if 'lending' is against copyright law and yet Amazon 'allow' lending to family members or whoever, then surely Amazon are in the wrong for misleading customers? | |
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|  10-15-2014, 09:40 AM | #237 | |
| Addict            Posts: 265 Karma: 1135030 Join Date: Nov 2010 Location: England Device: Boox Go Color 7, Kobo Forma, Kindle Keyboard | Quote: 
 I can cite any number of personal experiences when I have lent or given away a copy of a book to someone in the hope they'd find a new genre or author to like as a result. And in a number of cases, that's exactly what happened. The reader subsequently went on to not only buy other books from that particular author, but in a wider sense within the genre they hadn't explored before. So, yes I encouraged piracy and yet helped generate sales anyway. Go figure. | |
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|  10-15-2014, 10:52 AM | #238 | 
| Award-Winning Participant            Posts: 7,402 Karma: 69116640 Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: NJ, USA Device: Kindle | 
			
			The "piracy encourages sales" argument sounds a lot like the school bully who steals a kid's lunch money and says "I did you a favor, bro.  Lunch is awful today." In short: If the copyright owner wanted your help he'd tell you so. You are stealing his control and his right to make those decisions for his own work, in violation of copyright law. When speaking of copyright issues, which is what DRM is primarily about, there is no comparison or similarity between giving someone a physical book, which fine, legal and proper, and creating an unauthorized duplicate of an ebook and distributing it to someone in express violation of the permissions you were given, which is precisely what copyright law exists to prevent you from doing, and no Machiavellian rationalization about how much people like the pirated copies and what they might do afterwards justifies it. That being said, there IS important value in sharing books, and nothing I said above changes my conviction that copyright law, DRM systems, licenses and fair use doctrine, SHOULD include fair and unobtrusive mechanisms and policies for sharing and lending. ApK Last edited by ApK; 10-21-2014 at 04:28 PM. | 
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|  10-15-2014, 11:09 AM | #239 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 1,270 Karma: 10468300 Join Date: Dec 2011 Device: a variety (mostly kindles and kobos) | Quote: 
 The terms can then be written in such a way as to allow limited copying that looks a lot like lending. But these terms could be varied - number of times a book can be lent, number of lending recipients, length of lending period etc. Amazon, who are not the copyright owner in most cases, provide a mechanism for lending but crucially not all publishers choose to use it, or use it for all books. Similarly the number of devices one can simultaneously have a book on varies from book to book and is set by the publisher not Amazon. That's also a form of lending. | |
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|  10-15-2014, 11:15 AM | #240 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 28,880 Karma: 207000000 Join Date: Jan 2010 Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD | 
			
			Make no mistake: I never claimed I was trying (or wanted) to "help" copyright owners. I was simply pointing out how lending could just as likely be construed as being beneficial as it could be harmful (regardless of the medium). Neither can really be quantifiably "proven." Any studies that claim to prove otherwise are flawed. Because the data needed for proof would require time-travel and/or alternate-universe hopping to obtain. I agree with your last paragraph, ApK. And when the reality of DRM systems and copyright law are in accordance with such sentiments (with regard to ebooks), I will embrace both as being worthy of abiding by. Last edited by DiapDealer; 10-15-2014 at 11:23 AM. | 
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