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#106 |
Author's pet-geek
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Karma: 1040670
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: North Queensland, Australia
Device: Kindle 3 Wifi, Onyx Boox M96
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Steven,
Well, I've converted my wife, my family... and my wife even writes her books using Linux (LyX) ![]() Okay, it's not widespread conversion but at least it's starting. Might be a good idea if authors, when they go out on tours or have a captive audience to start informing people of the risks of DRM, or rather, the positives of not having DRM. Paul. |
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#107 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 4000000
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Paris
Device: Cybooks; Sony PRS-T1
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Quote:
DRM cannot work, for two reasons : - No security is bullet proof. Everything can and will be cracked. - Software is buggy. You will always find cases where the drm locks out the legit user. |
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#108 | |
Nameless Being
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Step 1.) After logging in, select the material you are interested in purchasing from any of the fine and competitive online retailers. Step 2.) Enter/confirm you financial information for said purchases. Step 3.) Download you new purchase from one of our secure transfer sites. Step 4.) Enjoy looking at the cover in one of the many numerous electronic bookshelves available for so many readers! (Now, they do admit that the current problem they are having with this particular DRM is that you aren't allowed to open the book at all. Still, after extensive in-house focus groups they've come to the revelation that most people don't want to actually read the ebooks. In fact, this new DRM will solve almost all the most vocal complaints from the un-well-scented literate masses. 1: No covers. The new system will almost ALWAYS include a cover (of some sort) so you can gaze in awe at you new, authorized ebook! 2: Text and formatting errors. Another problem solved after careful and arduous testing and development. If you can't read the book then any errors will be unnoticed. Brilliancy in action! 3: Reader lock-in. Another concern, this new system solves the inability to use on multiple devices or after switching devices. Each device registered under you 48 digit ownership number (must be a mixture of uppercase, lowercase, numbers and symbols in at least 3 languages and alternating each digit with a randomly selected one from our site) will be able to download the new DRM-featured ebook with no hassle or effort (aside from mandatory re-entering all information for each ebook on each device upon initial download). 4: And most importantly, this system will solve readers most pressing concern of how to prevent the PHs from losing money. Since the files contain nothing other than a (possible) cover, the money saved on proofing, editing, and publishing can all be passed to you, the consumer! (Minus small in-house fees.) Thus will (theoretically) be cheaper than even print books! Again, in-house testing has given a low, low price of -10% off of the MSRP hardback price as a wonderful incentive that will drive most honest readers wild with consumer lust.) So lay aside all these silly and out-dated conversations about DRM. That was the past and the Future is Now! Whoops, Now is now then.... Okay, Now!...blast, it's already then again. Looks like we need some more work... |
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#109 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 5171130
Join Date: Jan 2006
Device: none
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If ebook authors had a boilerplate statement, something short and to the point, that they could throw in at any public appearance or speech, they could begin to spread the word to the reading public about DRM. |
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#110 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 5171130
Join Date: Jan 2006
Device: none
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Software gets better. Don't assume that things will never get better than they are right now. Technologically- and historically-speaking, that's a losing bet. |
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#111 |
Author's pet-geek
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Karma: 1040670
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: North Queensland, Australia
Device: Kindle 3 Wifi, Onyx Boox M96
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Steven,
It's quite probable though that a lot of authors with extremely large captive audiences might not have that ability due to their tie-in with their publishers - however, for the rest of us I think it's a worthy thing to push for. I can imagine if the likes of J.K.R. and S.Meyer suddenly sprouted some non-DRM rhetoric it would become a very interesting environment very quickly. Paul (who should be sleeping by now!) |
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#112 | |
neo
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Karma: 112
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: New Mexico
Device: none
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However, I do also need to eat. And I do think that I deserve to be paid for my work just as everyone else is, and not to apologize for preferring not to live in poverty (not that anyone has suggested I should, but I feel an implication in the conversation as a whole). So I don't have any embarrassment about my concerns for finding the right balance when it comes to finding the best approach for getting paid for what of mine is being read, whatever it might turn out to be... If I'm uncertain about DRM issues, it's with good reason: my personal stakes are pretty large. I hope to continue learning here, so I can be wiser about it all. |
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#113 |
Author's pet-geek
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Karma: 1040670
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: North Queensland, Australia
Device: Kindle 3 Wifi, Onyx Boox M96
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Doranna,
Simply put - even with DRM your books will get onto the torrents, it's inevitable. DRM is a way of ultimately alienating the very people you're trying to draw money from - or worse, peeving them off after they've given you the money. If you let go of the concern and just focus on writing, publishing and marketing the books you'll find it's one less thing you have to care about. Paul. |
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#114 | |
New York Editor
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Karma: 16540415
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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______ Dennis |
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#115 |
Connoisseur
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Karma: 122
Join Date: Jul 2008
Device: CyBook Gen3, Sony PRS-600
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The problem isn't really someone like Amazon going under and "releasing" the DRM source for you to unlock it yourself. Most of the DRM "formats" (Adobe ePub/Mobipocket/Amazon) rely on retailer servers to authenticate your book (the exception that I'm aware of is eReader that uses a credit card). The problem is more a retailer/publisher using one of these formats. Lets take fictionwise as a really good example, to read one of their Mobipocket encrypted books you have to enter your device PID into their server, which then calls the mobipocket servers (well actually I believe its a third party distributer but that adds even more fragility) and you get to read it on your device (PC/ebook reader/laptop/etc.). If you want to read it on a new device you need to re-log into Fictionwise and add a new PID and re-download the book. Should Fictionwise ever shut up shop, you will be unable to read your book on any new devices (think replacing your PC/ebook reader etc) ever again (without certain DRM stripping tools of course). Even should fictionwise ever decide to stop supporting Mobipocket this will happen. Now fictionwise do not own the mobipocket encryption "rights" so cannot release it. So you are stuck basically!
The theory behind so called DRM is basically flawed anyway and has been ever since they started putting loader protection on old 8 bit tape loading games and macrovision on VHS. Why? because every one of these pieces of Media are designed to be watched/listened to/read/etc. and once out of the control of the encryptor someone will be able to copy/unlock it because they are designed to be unlocked (so you can actually consume them), taking this into account someone will always be able to reverse engineer the unlocking process given sufficient time and will, I mean look at the time and effort people go to, for copying paper based books and uploading them for no apparent reason (I mean by the time they have scanned each page, OCR'd and error corrected them they have read the book several times already). Mark |
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#116 | ||
Wizard
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Karma: 529619
Join Date: May 2007
Device: iRex iLiad, DR800SG
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#117 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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Karma: 119230421
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Denver, CO
Device: Kindle2; Kindle Fire
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#118 | |
New York Editor
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Karma: 16540415
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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Quote:
First, does DRM help prevent piracy of your work? The answer is "almost certainly not". I don't know of any DRM system that has not been cracked almost immediately after release. And once one copy is cracked and the DRM removed, the floodgates are opened. The person who cracks it can upload it to file sharing sites, and it might as well not have had DRM at all. DRM is about as effective at preventing piracy as the average door lock is at stopping a burglar who is a skilled lock picker. The good ones will go through the door without breaking stride. DRM is effective at pissing off the customer. I have a simple desire. I want to download electronic content once, and read it on whatever I happen to have. That may be a desktop PC, a laptop, a netbook, a tablet, a smartphone, a PDA - for that matter, there a ebook viewer app for Nintendo DS handheld gaming devices. I want it in a format I can convert, if necessary, if the format it is delivered in if one I can't read on the device I want to use. (For example, my usual ebook reader is a PDA that handles everything expect ePub. No problem if there's no DRM in the way: I can convert the ePub to something I can read.) DRM schemes usually work by locking the content to authorized devices, and may not let me read the content on everything I have. It will certainly prevent me from format shifting to accommodate devices that don't have native support for a particular format. Most folks I know on MobileRead immediately strip the DRM from content they purchase to avoid such issues. I take it one step further, I simply refuse to purchase DRM protected content. Second, you got pirated. So what? Sure, there's a nasty feeling of violation and outrage. You're upset, and I don't blame you. But what have you actually lost? How many potential sales did you lose because your work got pirated? How much money did you not get because someone downloaded and read a pirated copy of your work instead of purchasing a legitimate one? You don't know, and you can't know. You can to some extent track the number of illegal downloads, by creating an account on file sharing sites and watching the activity, but all that tells you is that someone downloaded a file. It doesn't tell you what they did with it afterward. For example, I found a torrent file that had links to 13,000 SF/Fantasy titles. Do you think anyone who downloads the torrent will actually read more than a tiny fraction of the total? It all comes down to your feelings about the market. Mine is that piracy is like shoplifting of physical goods at a retailer - a nuisance, not a disaster. Yes, there are pirates. Yes, there are people who will happily benefit from the pirate's labors, and grab a pirated copy instead of buying one. But while I may be a starry-eyed optimist, I think that the majority of the market is honest. They are willing to pay for value. Your challenge is to provide value they find worth paying for, price appropriately, and make it as easy as possible for them to find your content and give you money. Instead of worrying about and trying to take measures to prevent piracy, invest the time and effort into letting the folks who might like your work know that you and it exist, and grow your readership. The more people who read your stuff and want more, the more who will pay you for it, pirates or no. ______ Dennis |
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#119 | ||
Wizard
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Karma: 529619
Join Date: May 2007
Device: iRex iLiad, DR800SG
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#120 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 4000000
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Paris
Device: Cybooks; Sony PRS-T1
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Quote:
The only reason i buy books with drm is because I can strip them off. Publisher own the author of indept a lot for fixing their crap. Else, i would have lived without the book, or gotten the totally drm-free pbook. I understand the desire from authors to get paid. But as a customer, piracy is not my problem. I'm not the one pirating books, i don't give a damm others do. I just want to read ! Why should I be restricted because of some idiots ? Why should I pay, when all I get in return is restrictions that the people who got the book for free don't have ? The paid for book must be of better quality, not lesser quality. Last edited by EowynCarter; 09-25-2010 at 04:35 PM. |
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