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#76 | |
Connoisseur
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Germany
Device: Bookeen Cybook Gen3
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Alan |
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#77 | |
The Introvert
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Karma: 1000077497
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Device: Sony Reader PRS-650 & 505 & 500
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If you missed it, I will repeat - it is a matter of a few clicks to remove drm from LIT file. If DRM was a neccessity to stop piracy then most of books published in LIT format would be out there, on the darknet. However, they are not available on the darknet. Why? Your logic is faulty. |
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#78 | |||||
Wizard
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Karma: 67827
Join Date: Jan 2005
Device: PocketBook Era
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Authors do not own (and have never owned) their stories. That's why their works are protected by copyright laws instead of property laws. Quote:
Copyright, unlike property rights, is a government granted right. So, yes, the government decided. Quote:
The act of putting the book in physical form (like on paper) copyrights it. My grocery list, as soon as I write it down, is copyrighted automatically according to the messed up copyright laws of today. The author would have to expressly release his work into the public domain if he wants to give up his copyright. |
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#79 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Grass Valley, CA
Device: EB 1150, EZ Reader, Literati, iPad 2 & Air 2, iPhone 7
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Dale |
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#80 | |
The Introvert
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Location: United Kingdom
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![]() I do not suggest giving ebooks away free, I suggest to sell them, although without DRM! |
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#81 | |
Zealot
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Device: FBReader on Android
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Last edited by msundman; 01-10-2008 at 01:27 PM. Reason: clarification |
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#82 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 13095790
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Grass Valley, CA
Device: EB 1150, EZ Reader, Literati, iPad 2 & Air 2, iPhone 7
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#83 | |
The Introvert
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![]() Last edited by astra; 01-10-2008 at 03:28 PM. Reason: self-righteous with hyphen |
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#84 | |||||||||
Connoisseur
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Of course it is. It is not a 100 % protection, but it is a protection to some level. I lock my car. Sure, that is no 100 % protection, since it can get stolen anyway. But it is a level of protection anyway. Quote:
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#85 | |||
Zealot
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Device: FBReader on Android
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Are you getting any of this? Quote:
If I pick up a pamphlet from the bus seat next to me I have not agreed to any contract with the maker of that pamphlet. Yet I don't have the right to make copies of that pamphlet as I see fit. Why? Because the government has decided I'm better off without this natural right of mine. Now, do you or do you not agree on this point? I answered. It certainly is neither. I did that. |
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#86 | ||||
Connoisseur
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Device: Bookeen Cybook Gen3
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Of course you do. Every time you buy something there is a contract between you and the seller. Every time you buy your groceries there is a contract between you and the supermarket. It might no be in writing, but it is certainly a verbal contract.
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So again, the author of any work is free to apply whatever rules to his work he wants. Quote:
Alan |
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#87 | |
The Introvert
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I am afraid you have no idea what you are talking about. Just compare titles available in LIT/Mobipocket/Kindle formats. Books published in LIT format are just the same books published in Mobipocket. The latest bestsellers in other words etc. No one strips DRM and upload them to darknet though. My point is still valid. People who don't want to pay for ebooks, they don't pay. DRM or no DRM, it doesn't matter. However, people who do want to pay for ebooks but don't want to deal with DRM buy LIT books but do NOT distribute them illegaly. So, if tomorrow Mobipocket removes DRM protection, almost nothing is going to change. People who didn't want to pay will continue to use darknet. People who wanted to pay, will pay. Why almost? Because a group of people who want to pay for ebooks but will not buy DRMed books will join in. And again, people who do not want to pay will not pay. DRM doesn't stop them from scanning books and participating in darknet activities and societies. DRM doesn't stop them, then what is a point of DRM? Honest people would pay anyway? [EDIT] and I apologise for a bit harsher than neccessary language in my previous post. Sorry a bout it. Last edited by astra; 01-11-2008 at 04:31 AM. |
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#88 | |||||
Zealot
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Device: FBReader on Android
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I don't believe for a ns that anyone at your grocery has told you what you must and can't do with your groceries that you buy there. Quote:
If the government hadn't taken my natural copying-rights away from me then I would be free to copy a book as I see fit if I get my hands on it (unless I have agreed to some anti-copying contract when obtaining it, but I probably wouldn't agree to something like that). Also, you seem to be under the impression that the "Copyright (C) ..." text on the front pages of a book actually means something significant normally. The reality is that everything non-trivial* is copyrighted (i.e., no need to put a copyright disclaimer on stuff), and even if I put a copyright disclaimer on something trivial* it doesn't make it copyrighted. (* there are certain rules for what is copyrightable and what is not, and it's not as simple as "trivial/non-trivial", but all that's irrelevant here) Quote:
Still, the government hasn't taken all my natural copying-rights away from me. I still have some left, in the form of "fair use" (which, of course, many publishers hate and try to circumvent by using DRM). Quote:
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I expect authors to get paid more with the system I outlined than if the current system is used for many more years. My system also has the nice feature that good authors are rewarded more, since my system depends on good content and not just good marketing. You are the one being unreasonable, wanting sellers to have utter dominion over buyers. You are probably also in favor of other monopolies and price-fixing and other anti-consumer stuff. After all, hindering such things is just more government meddling. Traditionally the buyers have to be completely and utterly dependent on the goodwill of the sellers and more or less have faith in the truthfulness of the marketing. The sellers can dictate almost whatever they want and the buyers can only choose between agreeing on the sellers' awful terms or to get nothing. If there was an infinite diversity among sellers then this would be no problem, since then the buyer could just choose another seller, but in reality the sellers often aren't a very heterogenous bunch. I can understand that people who have been brought up in this post-industrial world just assume that this is how things are done. But I can't understand how anyone who really thinks about it could actually come to the conclusion that this is ethical and moral, right and just, or even for the good of mankind. |
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#89 | |
Connoisseur
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Karma: 72819
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Drenthe, The Netherlands
Device: Cybook Gen3 (cracked screen)/Bebook/Nokia E60/Nokia 5800/Kobo Aura HD
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![]() Quote:
![]() This may sound trivial, but it is the basis on which books are sold. An author has a great idea for a story and writes it down. A publisher is willing to "clean it up", put it in a container (a book) and sell it to an audiance. Both the author and the publicer have done actual work for the book so both should get paid. But there is no reason why they should be paid twice if I want to switch from one e-reader to another. Their work is done, they've been paid, I only want the story in another format. This means that when I have paid for the story and the container, I am free to do what I want with the story and the container. Of course, it wouldn't be fair to resell the story to somebody else, acting as if it was my story. That's why there is something like copyright. Drm is only there, because we (and the book industry) mistake the container for the story, but basically that's not right: you want to pay for the story, not for the container (although you may be willing to spend some extra money if it's a very nice container, like a hard-cover). Those are my 2c$ ![]() |
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#90 | ||||||||||
Connoisseur
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Germany
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oral_contract Ups, the correct term would be oral contract. I hope you excuse the incorrect term I used. I'm not a native English speaker. Quote:
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Alan |
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