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#121 | |
Ninja Librarian
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Despite that, I feel, being only my individual opinion, that this comparison being based on what we may consider somewhat accurate historical facts, presents a somewhat stronger statement than either presenting an individuals salary or just saying "no author made a living before copyright", since both those are based on opinions disproven by the current historical data. This argument is futher strengthed by the somewhat singificant circumstance that there in academic circles seems currently no disagreement with those historical data. By that I mean that I, I being an individual, has established, so far, that the historical claims presented so far has been inaccurate, and until disproven that Copyright, in that representative historical context, has had harmful implications for both authors and consumers. I, not being an authority on this subject, naturally not being able to establish this futher than you hopefully accepting the evidence given as credible and willing to debate it. I really shouldn't write past midnight, I get somewhat pedantic ![]() I just feel that Copyright, from a historical perspective, has been harmful to creativity and accessability, and as such we as consumers need to attempt to affect changes towards improving it. Noone else is going to do it for us. That being in small ways by avoiding DRM'd books, or being vocal about high priced books being bollocks. |
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#122 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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However, if you've got a decent tolerance for grammar problems, unproofed manuscripts (with common doubled words or missing prepositions), and short stories whose "shocking" conclusion you can figure out in the first three paragraphs--you can find some gems buried in the piles of muck. There's more muck than in mainstream books; most of them had *nothing* but the author's ego to guide them about what's presentable. But there's also gems that could never get through a mainstream process because they don't fit the normal categories, or they're "too long" for their genre, or "too short," or just have a perspective that mainstream publishers aren't going to think is salesworthy. I absolutely adore The Binder of Shame Presents: The RPG.net rants. I printed out six copies & handed them around to my gaming group, and we were all rolling on the floor over it. Grammar problems, missing punctuation, lousy formatting that I can't tell whether is from the original or the Meatgrinder ... and I don't care; this is going to be one of my "reread every year when I need a dose of hysterical laughter" books. It'd never get past a mainstream publisher, even a gaming one--the niche is too small. But for that niche, it's gold. OTOH, in looking for the link for that, I saw the new books posted. Sigh. $2.50 for The Divine Heart of God the Father Consecration and Prayer Book by "Apostolate of the Divine Heart", which I'm going to try not to think too much about. It's less than 2000 words. one thing led to another by goodness chinedu has this charming description: Quote:
I can understand the people who want to stick with mainstream publishers for a while longer; the quality's at least mostly *consistent.* Even the bad stuff follows patterns. I do agree that there's some *terrific* stuff, not just niche stuff, in self-publishing. Ellen O'Connell is incredible; I will happily buy *anything* she writes. And while I think the percentage of total crap is higher than in mainstream publishing, I think it's worth wading through some of the sludge, and clicking on lots of previews, in order to find the quality books. |
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#123 | |
Banned
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#124 | |
Ninja Librarian
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1. Copyright is about alot more than price. 2. To improve or replace the system, you need tangible realistic alternatives that contains an incentment to innovate, a way of ensuring the integrity of artistic works, that discerns between the subjective value of works and finally which rewards content creators, creating an incentment to produce. Unless your an anarchist, you can't really replace 2, without ensuring those factors are taken care of, since such drastic changes will be hard to affect in an established industry, which is why I am not completely opposed to some of the aspects of copyright on a personal level (while thinking its important to fight it on a political level). I personally feel that the most important thing is to affect changes. The fact that technical innovation has made it easy to rampantly copy provides one incentment for companies to innovate (unfortunately they are currently wasting that chance by sticking to their guns and simply becoming more restrictive). This is a perfect opportunity for them to explore how they can provide added value. Create an eco system that allows you to ask questions to the original author on a forum, or other things relevant for the fanbase, release special leatherbound editions. There's many things you can do, where instead of combating the profiliation of your work, which is inevitable regardless, by making your work more useless, you can add value and actually benefit the more, the more users it reaches. The other incentment needs to come from us users. By rewarding business models that rewards authors in a more direct sense and provide an open way of obtaining content. By fighting copyright itself and vote against those of our representatives not representing our interests, since that's really the only way we'll ever stop OUR politicians from extending copyrights every time a Disney copyright is about to run out. (said statement may not be factually correct, but just used as an example for how the industry dictates the terms rather than us). |
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#125 |
Wizard
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#126 |
Ninja Librarian
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#127 | |
Banned
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Only the most creative of content would be rewarded. All the rest would be relegated to the bin, sorted through by those who have the time to sort. This act of sorting would itself be content creation, and could be incentivized as well. I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for politicians to act virtuously. |
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#128 | ||
Member Retired
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Ultimately your arguments are ideologically based and have no bearing on reality. |
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#129 | |||
Karma Kameleon
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But if you write for those who CAN pay, then your books will exist -- and Poor Billy can check them out from the library, borrow them from a friend, or buy the used paper back when it hits his local garage sale. A book that exists will always be a better option for Poor Billy, even if he can't afford it the first day it's released. Quote:
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Lee |
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#130 | |
Chasing Butterflies
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#131 |
Grand Sorcerer
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How one feel is subjective but the quality is not. A spelling mistake or a grammar error does not disappear just because a reader does not notice it.
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#132 | |||
Ninja Librarian
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It's a challenge that faced many libraries, do they invest in books with good narratives and of a high standard, content wise or should they invest most heavily in the books the public wanted, even if it was in their eyes trashy litterature such as Duke Nuk'em the Book. Out of the top 10 most bestselling Kindle books, 4 were by indie authors. Out of the 25 bestselling indie authors,only 6 has ever had a publishing deal and professional editing before. Are their popularity an indication of their quality? If so, selfpublishing doesn't seem to affect the quality negatively enough that good writers aren't making it to the top on their own. How well a book is edited also impact on the quality, I don't disagree there, and it'd serve services like that well if they looked into how they could provide an editor function, by utilitizing their network. But publishing is not a guarantee for quality, and selfpublishing is not a guarantee for reduced quality. Quote:
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So your statement is inaccurate. Last edited by Leyor; 05-13-2011 at 10:38 AM. |
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#133 | |||
Karma Kameleon
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Not so. As you have correctly pointed out, the origins of the British copyright model were not about economics but about censorship and government control of ideas. Lumping those notions in with copyright as it was instituted in America and how it's used today is spurious to begin with. Also, your historical facts support what today's copyright supports claim. Without copyright there is vast plagarism. That was true even back then and would be orders of magnitude more relevant today. Yes, with copyright prices are higher. That's the VIRTUE of copyright, not a problem with copyright. The virtue of copyright allows there to be income from more than just direct labor. Beethoven could make money from teaching piano, of course. But with copyright, he could make money from creating a symphony -- and not just from his own performance of said symphony. Today we have BOTH copyright AND the free exchange of ideas. Anyone who wants to put their work into the public domain can do so. Thanks to copyright, those who wish to control their creations and be paid for them can do so as well. Your one link to a paper that tries to put all the differences between Germany and Britain on copyright is full of holes. Self evidently flawed. Lee |
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#134 | |
Banned
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If you add the option for Billy to download the ebook for free to his cheap disposable ereader from a website he can access at the library then I would have to agree with you. Every system has its problems, capitalism has many, communistic anarchy has little, perhaps none, except maybe the people who still adhere to capitalism. |
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#135 | |||
Ninja Librarian
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A study conducted by economic historical Echard Hôffner, who's managed to get this and other articles published in peer reviewed journals. I'd say his credentials currently ranks above yours and mine. The study contains the economic background and context, an economic impact assessment and alot of empirical data, also supported by other authoritan sources. While there in science are no "facts" only theories, I'd say that there's a weight of empirical data that atleast supports this position. Not really going to debate this futher as currently your weight of argumentation has been "because I said so". Quote:
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I know the best defence is an attack, but as I wrote before, I insist on accuracy, and I'd like to thank you very much to actually read your own thread before making red herring claims. You've offered no basis for your position besides your own conjecture. I've made two major claims, one that people here has defended copyright based on invalid historical assumptions like the one above, two that there's no intrinsic value to books being priced highly. I'd very much like that you back up your own claims before you attack mine. Your argument about plagiarism is also a hollow one. Your premise is that plagiarism in itself is a bad thing, and it should be selfevident to the rest of us. However despite plagiarism authors earned more. So PLEASE be precise and call a shovel a shovel. Plagiarism in that SPECIFIC context only hurt already wealthy publishers. I am really uncertain what your motives are. Your definitely not advocating the cause of authors, your not advocating the cause of consumers. The historical data over more than hundred years: 1710: Germany: Plagiarism Authors earned more pr book. 10x more original works More people could afford the books Britain: Copyright Authors earned 2.5 times less pr. book Less original works Only the wealthiest could afford it. Instead of saying, wow, thats interesting, how come the authors earned more, or even if you want to be critical dig into the fact that Britain was alot more progressive and wealthier than germany. You instantly go, woops plagiarism, bad, just because it is. You can attack my claims and data, but as I said, I'd like to see you offer up some of your own. Also keep in mind that I don't claim that abolishing copyright today would have the same result, I am merely referencing what HAS happened. I'd love to have a discussion with you about how interesting it is, that alot of people earn more money the lower they price their books, and who a high price of books genuinely profits. But it seems we can't get past the past. Maybe for the sake of understanding, you could list what You think are the positives of the book industry, and we can argue from there? Because I am really confused on who you really wish to benefit. Last edited by Leyor; 05-13-2011 at 12:40 PM. |
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