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#166 |
Wandering Vagabond
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Device: iPod Touch
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#167 |
Curmudgeon
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Device: PRS-505
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Legality isn't the issue here, though. The effects on authors are the issue.
If the free availability of a book affects sales, then it will affect sales whether it's legally or illegally free. If piracy reduces sales, library copies will reduce sales; if one doesn't, neither will the other. Libraries are less physically convenient; illicit downloads are less morally convenient. Which wins out in terms of numbers? I have no clue. But a non-sale is a non-sale, whether someone copied the ebook, checked out the pbook from the library, or just didn't read it in the first place. |
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#168 | |
Award-Winning Participant
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Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: NJ, USA
Device: Kindle
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Quote:
http://baen.com/library/ Note he calls piracy immoral, and note the authors choose to participate or not. There are people here who seem to think that they should be able to make that choice for any book or author they happen to feel like reading. It's GREAT when authors give books away! It's bad when people take them without permission. It's worse when they argue that they are doing a Good Thing for the author when they do. |
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#169 | |
Award-Winning Participant
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Location: NJ, USA
Device: Kindle
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Quote:
And they don't, so even the POTENTIAL 'damage' is not worth mentioning in this context. But more to the point, we, as a society, decided that lending libraries are of value to society, so we create them and support them, and in doing so, authors agree to accept the small potential 'lost' sales from them. And they pay for the books they acquire and lend, because we as a society decided that intellectual property like books have value, and that value should be protected by laws, which sometimes means paying for them. |
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#170 |
Guru
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Device: Kobo, Kindle 3, Paperwhite
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I gave up on this thread about halfway through, but I was intrigued by Steven Lyle Jordan's comments.
I, too, write for money. I've wanted to be a professional writer and make my living from writing since I was about 12 or 14. Writing is hard, lonely work. Marketing your work is even harder. At any given moment, there are probably 10, 20, 100 things I'd rather do...including nothing...than write. My book makes me about $100/month on Amazon, more or less (okay, often less). It's hard to make myself sit down and write another book for $100/month. If I knew that when I finished it I'd get a check for $100,000, I'd be up before dawn hitting the keyboard! But ebook sales...uhm, not so much. I'm "working" on another one, but I'm taking my time. It'll happen if I don't get hit by a truck first, but there's no rush. Because the fact is, I can enjoy this idea all by myself without lifting a finger. If other people want to enjoy it, they need to give me some incentive to put in the hundreds of hours of work it'll take to make it available to them. So I've adopted the NPR model: I'll get sales from the people who care enough to pay three bucks for my book. Many others will mooch it for free--screw 'em, I don't care. My audience is the people who pay the three bucks. It isn't much. I went for coffee with a co-worker and she dropped $7 for a coffee and a snack. A book that gives you several hours of entertainment is worth $3, easy. I'm just delighted right now that my book is available after being out of print for six years. There's no more work involved, so the money is gravy. I'm happy about it! But like Jordan says, there's not a compelling financial reason to make more books. I will, probably, but as a hobby, not as a profession. Maybe when I retire and have more time. I don't blame the pirates so much, though, as I do the simple fact that there's a helluva lot of books out there. Pretty soon living authors will be competing with every book that's ever been printed. Fact of life. Supply and demand. You want to make good money, learn to weld. Last edited by J. Strnad; 04-25-2011 at 11:46 PM. |
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#171 |
Indie Advocate
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Melbourne, Australia
Device: Kindle
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Hi Jan,
How do you pronounce your last name? I just had a look at your site and the comment about Risen being a supernatural thriller rather than a blood and guts horror interested me. I've put you on my wish list. Regards Caleb |
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#172 |
Wandering Vagabond
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Device: iPod Touch
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I just want to say that 'Risen' is amazing. I went to the site and downloaded the free prequel and loved every second of it. I bought the full book and, while I have yet to read it, I know I have a pleasurable story awaiting me. It was well worth the money.
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#173 | |
Banned
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Karma: 4368191
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Oregon
Device: Kindle3
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Quote:
Some people just don't want to pay for books, they would rather buy pizzas and beer, that's cool too. If you don't want to write anymore because of these people not paying for your books??? |
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#174 |
Curmudgeon
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Device: PRS-505
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#175 | |||
Addict
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Karma: 177956
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Germany
Device: PRS-650
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Quote:
![]() @Steven: If you like writing as a hobby, you could try getting a free blog and writing serial fiction or short stories without trying to sell, just for the feedback. (And maybe a tipjar.) Which doesn't solve the problem if you're looking for a "hobby" to earn extra money, but would let you write as a hobby without having to pay for hosting and ebook covers, and would save time with the formatting. Quote:
Last month I dropped $15 in the paypal tipjar of a writer putting series of flash fiction I loved on her blog. If that makes me inhuman... well, cool. :P I've seen authors use "If you enjoy my book, you should pay for it!" as argument against piracy... I agree. I also note that that isn't a good argument against the subset of piracy that's used as free sampling, because the corrolary is "I should not have to pay for a book if I don't know if I enjoy it". Quote:
Last edited by Anke Wehner; 04-26-2011 at 02:40 AM. |
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#176 | |
»(°±°)«
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Karma: 775629
Join Date: Oct 2010
Device: divisive reader
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Quote:
My book buying habits haven't changed since I got my reader; I still buy just as many p-books. It seems to me that they are intrinsically more valuable, probably because I want to keep them after reading, I can lend them, or could give them away if I want to. Whereas I feel that e-books are just another form of the book - an extension of the book - which is more convenient in some ways, but less so in others. So, overall, I feel that p-books are more valuable than e-books, therefore I would expect to pay less for an e-book version. In some cases a lot less. For example, an e-book version of a lavishly illustrated colour p-book wouldn't provide the same experience on my monochrome reader. So the e-book would be worth a lot less to me. Sure there are devices that can display colour, but my chosen reader is monochrome. There's not much added value in an e-book, compared with its paper version, or at least not sufficient to make up the perceived value difference - for me at least. However, it isn't just the typos and layout issues that make e-books feel less valuable, but it also has something to do with their durability and practicality. If an e-book isn't really mine, when I buy it, if my ability to read it depends on the viability of my reader or the publisher, if I'm not allowed to lend it to a friend, or give it away, then all these things - for me at least - make e-books seem considerably less valuable. DRM is a repellent, so far as I am concerned. I have read both legally downloaded free e-books and DRM-free commercial ones. It terms of the reading experience, both seem remarkably similar. All right, perhaps the DRM-free commercial ones contained fewer typos, but overall their perceived value was pretty much the same. So, I am left with the feeling the e-books are worth less than p-books. In some cases considerably less. I wouldn't dream of stealing a hardcopy, but understand why some people are tempted to pirate e-versions, particularly those which are geo-restricted. If I walk into a bookstore at an airport and buy a hardcopy, I can take with me anywhere, I can lend it, give it away, or keep it forever. There are people who will always pirate, and those who do so to overcome minor irritations and inconveniences. I think it's important to distinguish between the two. It seems to me that the already struggling publishing industry is not doing itself any favours by alienating those who would otherwise buy e-books, but for the DRM or geo-restrictions. |
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#177 |
Evangelist
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Device: back to x51v
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Don't know what the answer is, do know that Cory Doctorow and various other authors give away ebooks as well as sells printed books with the same title.
I do believe in supporting authors so when I download a (possibly illegal) ebook I browse through it and delete it if it is of no interest. If I keep the book I purchase a hard copy from the local book store. |
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#178 | |
Feral Underclass
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Karma: 26821535
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Yorkshire, tha noz
Device: 2nd hand paperback
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Quote:
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#179 | |
Feral Underclass
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Karma: 26821535
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Yorkshire, tha noz
Device: 2nd hand paperback
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Quote:
People who read for free are also a lot less likely to write negative reviews. If they don't like it they won't get much more than a few pages into it and move on to something else. Whereas if they paid for it they will persevere with it to get their money's worth, then tell the whole world how bad your book is and how much they hate you for making them waste their money. |
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#180 |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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Location: Denver, CO
Device: Kindle2; Kindle Fire
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So then what do we do, make the internet a pay-per-bit entity and pay out royalties to all content providers based on some algorithm?
No free downloads that way. |
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dead horse, dead meat |
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