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#166 |
Manic Do Fuse
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Karma: 3325462
Join Date: Oct 2006
Device: Sony 500, 505, 350, Kindle 3, DXG, nook, Irex DR800SG, iPad
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Personally I think Amazon should have separate reviews for eBooks and Print Books. If want to give an ebook one star because you do not like the price it could be posted under the Kindle edition of the book. I see know reason to pollute the print reviews with factors that have no bearing on the book itself.
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#167 | ||||
Resident Curmudgeon
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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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#168 | |
DRM hater
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Karma: 2066176
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Michigan
Device: Nook ST glow, Kindle Voyage
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Advertising Payment processing Server bandwidth to run their site, and bandwidth to provide the downloads Customer service for orders Tech support assistance (for Kindles or Kindle apps) etc. Rather than physical storage of books. They're just providing different services than a physical book seller would be providing. I don't have any compunctions if publishers decided they would only sell their ebooks on a site they own at full MSRP. I do take issue with their ability to tell an independent retailer what they must sell it for. |
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#169 | |
Wanderer
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Karma: 318
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: New Amsterdam
Device: Kindle 3
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For such products, Amazon provides payment processing, server bandwidth, a certain amount of customer service (they do keep tabs and make sure third parties ship your order; I've been impressed). You could view the service as akin to "advertising" because it takes advantage of Amazon's heavy traffic. Who do you think sets the price when Amazon is selling products from "other sellers"? Hint: not Amazon, although Amazon does have policies regarding shipping/handling. Amazon in these cases is truly acting as an agent, not a retailer. It gets a cut from processing the transaction and offering the types of services GreenMonkey mentions. Does anyone really think it's "price-fixing" when Amazon sells a widget from Buy.com at a price set by Buy.com? This is why the "agency" model should not be dismissed so lightly. We like Amazon acting as an agent in certain circumstances. It's saved me money more than once. Yes, I will concede that the ebook situation is a bit different, but perhaps it is not quite as different as you think. Oh, and lest anyone think otherwise, even true "agency" is not necessarily enough to shield the "agency 5" arrangements from various state "unfair competition" laws. Many of these laws are not framed in terms of "agreement." Actually, the state laws can be a bit of a wilderness for a company to comply with, because they are so broad and vague. |
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#170 |
Banned
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Device: mine
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something to not forget, which is really what set off the alarms, was that the five companies acted in concert at the same time. How likely is it that spontaneously five competing companies all decide to change their vendor agreements to the same terms? If you recall there was the animated discussion between Jobs and execs from at least one company at the last CES during/after some product announcement, I think it was about the iPad but I don't remember the details though they are in a thread somewhere here.
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#171 | |
Wanderer
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Karma: 318
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: New Amsterdam
Device: Kindle 3
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I will add that "conspiracy" laws regarding these types of circumstances are one of the more complex areas of antitrust law. The line between what you can do and what you can't is sometimes extremely fuzzy. The publishers are certainly legally allowed to observe, in a hands-off way, what the other publishers are doing, and make their own decisions about whether or not to do the same thing. They are also legally allowed to hope that all the other publishers make the same decision. That said, if you had proof that the publishers got together in some smoke-filled room and said "let's all agree to force Amazon to accept agency pricing," you may be talking about a crime, for which people can (and do) go to jail. You might reach the same result if you could prove that Steve Jobs acted as a "gofer" to implement such a conspiracy, although I strongly doubt Jobs is that stupid. The man is smart, rich, and his company is going gangbusters; I cannot imagine why he would risk jail time for something like this. But, I have to be careful here, because the world of copyright is, simply put, different. Court cases have recognized that ASCAP and BMI can coordinate "blanket licenses" for music performances. This is really a form of price-fixing--the copyright owners are getting together and jointly agreeing on a price--but it's legal because special circumstances engender special rules. Fun fact: it is almost IMPOSSIBLE to tell, simply by viewing the outcome, whether parallel pricing decisions by competitors is the result of independent decisions or a conspiracy--even if the price changes are exactly the same and happen almost simultaneously. The Supreme Court has recognized this again and again. |
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#172 | |
Interested Bystander
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Device: Note 4, Kobo One
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#173 | |
Banned
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Karma: 15348
Join Date: Jun 2007
Device: mine
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I could see something as simple as Jobs telling each publisher he already had other publishers on board, even if he did not, and dangling that price control in front of them in exchange for that one part of the agreement about nobody being able to sell or pay a lower price than Apple, I forget which were the exact terms that leaked out and need to look them up. That is the weird part of the agreement that makes zero sense as it seems very risky to alienate Amazon, probably their biggest source of income these days. But with that simple part of the agreement, it all changed and Amazon could not do a thing without risking losing their lead in sales. Apple would not seem to have any real interest in selling ebooks, today. Just look up the iBookstore content info around the web, it's nothing. For Apple at this point in time there is just not enough money to be had in ebook sales....in five years, who knows since this agreement has really changed the landscape. And yeah, based on the way wireless telco's all the made same pricing changes to SMS pricing, and a few other prices, in a suspiciously serendipitous fashion for many people, but it would be near to impossible to prove without that smoking gun... As to why Jobs would risk something like this, ego and hubris...it's really that simple. Look at what Martha Stewart did for a few grand. It's not a far stretch that Jobs has a plan off in the future around how iPad content will go. This current situation could be be a way to impede Amazon, and to a lesser degree B&N, from owning the ebook market while iBookstore flounders due to the inability to sell enough content. Jobs has already indicated he wants to bring a more multi-media type of book to the people. The iPad can do this, standard ereaders can't. I don't believe it's about ebooks as they exist today but about new multi-media/interactive content from these same publishers in five years or so. Aren't conspiracy theories fun? I find it even more fun with Jobs in his real life role as El Diablo...or perhpas as El Chupacabra? Loki? ![]() |
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#174 |
Has got to the black veil
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Karma: 2144168
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Southeastern Pennsylvania
Device: Kobo Aura One, Kindle Paperwhite 2
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#175 | |
Wanderer
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Karma: 318
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: New Amsterdam
Device: Kindle 3
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If you want to look for a root cause why there is no used/secondary market for Kindle books, you need to go back to the copyright laws that permit and legally enforce DRM restrictions, and that give copyright owners the exclusive right to make copies. If you want to start a petition to repeal the DMCA, let me know and I might sign it. I am talking about what is legal, not what is desirable. Put another way: copyright law is about creating monopolies, not creating competition. You cannot expect to see the same type of markets for monopoly goods. |
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#176 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Oct 2010
Device: PocketBook 903 & 360+
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So yes, this is fun. Anyone have a different theory? ![]() |
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#177 |
Bob Avey
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Broken Arrow, OK
Device: none
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There is no doubt that e-books cost less to produce and, therefore, should be sold at a price that reflects the lower cost of production. However, it's not the author's fault that the publishers are overcharging.
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#178 | |
Wanderer
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Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: New Amsterdam
Device: Kindle 3
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![]() I'm more inclined to believe that Apple and the publishers were taking aim at Amazon. That's playing hardball, but it is not necessarily illegal. |
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#179 | |||
Professional Contrarian
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Device: Kindle 4 No Touchie
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You also have situations with "predatory pricing," where a company will intentionally lower prices in order to eliminate the competition -- which is pretty much what Amazon was doing prior to the agency model. However, it is worth noting that this is a very expensive strategy, and as such rarely works. Quote:
If you can prove in court that your actions end up offering an overall benefit to competition, then it is legal. E.g. offering every retailer the exact same costs and prices does prevent retailers from using price to compete against one another -- but it can also be seen as leveling one playing field, and leaving it to the retailers to compete on other grounds like customer service, advertising and so forth. In addition, the publishers are not using agency pricing to restrict the competition of the non-agency publishers. E.g. Penguin is not pulling its books with the demand that Apple refrain from selling O'Reilly titles. Quote:
Remember travel agents? They do not set any prices, and are not subsidiaries of the vendors they offer. Yet their existence was not evidence of "anti-competitive behavior" on the parts of the airlines, cruise lines or hotels. You could go to 2 different travel agents and wind up paying the exact same cost for the same itinerary. Plus, the retailers still benefit. Not only do they get their cut, but they are now in direct competition with the publishers -- as evidenced by Amazon cutting deals directly with authors. Should Amazon strictly act as a retailer, and not try to become a publisher as well...? |
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#180 | |
Wizard
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Device: PocketBook 903 & 360+
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