|  09-20-2011, 07:38 AM | #16 | 
| The Dank Side of the Moon            Posts: 35,930 Karma: 119747553 Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Denver, CO Device: Kindle2 & PW, Onyx Boox Go6 | 
			
			Hmmm, Amazon is a corporation, a business, like every business it intends to make a profit. It does this in a variety of ways. Some things it does is good for consumers, some is bad. Overall I think it is good and I am a regular (perhaps obsessive) customer. The vast majority of my books come via Amazon either as used pbooks or ebooks. Why? mostly selection, information about the books and price. I don't like mobi format though, in that respect Amazon is an outlier from the standard epub. If they would change that and get rid of DRM and shrug off the slavish chains of agency pricing control I'd be happy as a clam. And I am looking forward to seeing what they do in the tablet world! | 
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|  09-20-2011, 08:01 AM | #17 | 
| Coffee Nut            Posts: 410 Karma: 298350 Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Missouri Device: Kindle 3; K4PC; Calibre | 
			
			I have no complaints with Amazon.  When I access one of several price-comparison web sites in search of a pBook or eBook, Amazon is almost always the cheapest, fastest and most convenient of dozens of listed sources.  There have been very few books that I've searched for that are not listed.
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|  09-20-2011, 08:31 AM | #18 | 
| @DavidGaughran            Posts: 23 Karma: 654230 Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: Stockholm, Sweden Device: none (yet) | 
			
			I don't really understand the point of this article. With only minor editing, it could be about any big company. Companies will always seek to make the most profit they can. Often this involves eliminating the competition and paying as little tax as possible. I know some find some of Amazon's business practices unsavory. Personally, I've never been on the sharp end of that (apart from the boneheaded $2 Surcharge they apply to most e-books for international customers). As a self-publisher, I know that Amazon are the most "friendly" retailer to work with. By that, I mean they don't actively work to reduce the visibility of our books, and give as an even playing field to take on the work from the large publishers (unlike, say, Apple and Barnes & Noble). For that, I am grateful. But I'm not naive enough to think they are doing this out of the goodness of their heart. I'm fully aware that just because my interests and Amazon's interests might be aligned for now (poking the Big Six in the eye), that could well be different in the future. But I am happy with their self-publishing platform: it's easy to use, has great functionality, and allows me to reach customers around the world - all for free. And as a reader, they have the best online store out there, bar none. | 
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|  09-20-2011, 09:08 AM | #19 | 
| Guru            Posts: 718 Karma: 4033862 Join Date: Jun 2011 Device: sony prs-350 | 
			
			Companies and the customer relationship has always been the same. They have never been friends. Companies want to make a buck and consumers want to save. End of story.
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|  09-20-2011, 10:00 AM | #20 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,899 Karma: 6995721 Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Idaho, on the side of a mountain Device: Kindle Oasis, Fire 3d Gen and 5th Gen and Samsung Tab S | 
			
			I love reading, and for that reason, I love Amazon.  I can get just about any book, shipped to my door, for free, in 2 days.  A lot come overnight.  Compared with getting in my car, driving to the bookstore, spending at least an hour, and coming out with 5 or 6 books I will never read, I love being able to shop online. I agree the $9.99 wasn't the best thing. It certainly conditioned me. Now, I have a real problem paying over that. I think I mistakenly assumed that since Amazon was selling the books at $9.99, that is what they were worth. I need to work on changing that mindset. Independent bookstores were great, just like independent yarn stores were a pleasure. But they went out of business. Just this last Saturday, I discovered I was missing a book in a set of knitting books. I went online to find it, decided to look at bestselling knitting books, and walked away with $200 of knitting books. Not all are coming in 2 days, and some are pre-orders, so I will get some nice surprises. If I had gone to a local yarnstore to get knitting books, I would only be able to look at the limited selection they had on hand. Yes, internet sales taxes are coming. They are coming because Amazon has been so successful. An extra $20 on my bill, the price of a single book, isn't going to be a big deal. At least I hope it won't. Great article. Thanks for posting it. | 
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|  09-20-2011, 10:04 AM | #21 | |
| Tea Enthusiast            Posts: 8,554 Karma: 75384937 Join Date: Jul 2010 Location: Somewhere in the USA Device: Kindle1, Kindle DX Graphite, K3 3G, IPad 3, PW2 | 
			
			I think this sums up the counter argument very nicely. Quote: 
 Amazon provides a service that I find beneficial and I use it. Clearly the person posting that blog thinks that Amazon provides a service that he can use since he advertises his books sales on Amazon just above his posting a blog ranting about how evil Amazon is. I do love irony. That is irony right? And not stupidity? | |
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|  09-20-2011, 10:07 AM | #22 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,592 Karma: 4290425 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Foristell, Missouri, USA Device: Nokia N800, PRS-505, Nook STR Glowlight, Kindle 3, Kobo Libra 2 | 
			
			Now, I really don't seer why the big deal on the $9.99 pricing. Most books I've bought have always been under that. Yeah, I've waited till it was in paperback, but most of the paperbooks I bought was under the $9.99 pricing ($7.99 seemed to be the most common price for the longest time). After Agency has kicked in, I've noticed that as a whole, prices seem to be higher for both paper and ebook, for the same sort of book I used to get (paperback available, mainstream fiction).
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|  09-20-2011, 10:10 AM | #23 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,576 Karma: 36389706 Join Date: Dec 2009 Location: Quincy, MA Device: Samsung 54A, Kobo Libra H2O, Samsung S6 Lite | 
			
			Thank you! It seems the purpose of every business, is to drive their competition out of business so that they are the only ones in business. All companies care about is their bottom lines and how to increase them by charging us more, and giving us less than what we paid for. They take advantage of every loophole they can find, outsource their jobs to put people out of work (who will no longer have the money to spend on their products) and basically do whatever they can to screw people over. Amazon isn't any different from any other sleazy business operation. | 
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|  09-20-2011, 10:33 AM | #24 | 
| Loves Ellipsis...            Posts: 1,554 Karma: 7899232 Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Washington, DC Device: Kobo Wifi (broken), nook STR (returned), Kobo Touch, Sony T1 | 
			
			I'm not a huge Amazon person for only *some*of the reasons that the author mentioned.   I do hate Amazon's efforts to own the internet, though. In addition to the companies the author mentions Amazon also owns: AbeBooks AmazonLocal - Local deals like Groupon AmazonWireless - cell phone kisok but amazon branded Askville - Like Yahoo answer- amazon branded Audible Diapers.com DPReview - digital Photograhy database Endless - shoes (and clothes IIRC) Fabric - what it says - sewing IMDb - movies MYHABIT - clothes Shopbop - designer clothes and shoes Small Parts - hardware store Soap.com - home products Warehouse Deals - amazon branded Woot - this one just bothered me a lot. I loved Woot! Zappos - mostly shoes but also clothes | 
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|  09-20-2011, 11:12 AM | #25 | 
| Grand Master of Flowers            Posts: 2,201 Karma: 8389072 Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Naptown Device: Kindle PW, Kindle 3 (aka Keyboard), iPhone, iPad 3 (not for reading) | 
			
			What a profoundly stupid article! Amazon is not my "friend." However, I am a consumer, and Amazon is extremely consumer-focused. And if there is a choice between serving me and serving the publisher, well, I'd rather the the on that Amazon serves. And his point about Amazon being "deceptive" by not changing the names of Zappos or Audible or whatever, is more stupidity. First of all, one of the points of buying these companies is because they were already established in their particular area. If millions of people associate Zappos or Audible with shoes or audiobooks, it would be dumb for Amazon to change their name: that's a big part of the value. Secondly, there is no deception - audible and zappos both announced that they were being bought by Amazon, and offered customers the option of using their Amazon account instead of their Z or Aud. account. | 
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|  09-20-2011, 11:25 AM | #26 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,016 Karma: 2838487 Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Washington, DC Device: Ipad, IPhone | 
			
			EowynCarter  nails it. I think that the author does paint Amazon darker than it actually is. The article, though , is a welcome counterweight to those who see Amazon as Captain America and the publishers as Dr. Doom,Galactus, Darkseid and Magneto united. I think that what you can depend on is that Amazon is going to act in its corporate self-interest. When it tried to establish 9.99 as the default ebook price it wasn't doing that to "help consumers". Some people herethought that this was somehow the "right price" for ebooks, but that wasn't why Amazon did that. Rather, it was doing that to drive out competitors and establish its monopoly in the ebook market. After the competitors were driven out, we would have seen the "profit-maximizing monopolist " price, which would most assuredly have not been 9.99. The publishers , who were acting in THEIR self -interest (and the interest of its authors) countered with agency pricing . In that they were supported by Apple (who acted in ITS self-interest-it wanted its own store), by Google (ditto), by B&N and Kobo( Amazon competitors), and by independent booksellers (who wanted their own ebook space). Do you see a pattern yet? Last edited by stonetools; 09-20-2011 at 12:39 PM. | 
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|  09-20-2011, 11:34 AM | #27 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,592 Karma: 4290425 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Foristell, Missouri, USA Device: Nokia N800, PRS-505, Nook STR Glowlight, Kindle 3, Kobo Libra 2 | 
			
			I've followed Amazon's practices for a while, and while I don't agree with some, as a whole I am fine with. I understand they're in it for money, anyone who thinks ANY business (even nonprofits, since while they don't keep it, they still want as much money as they can to further their goals) is not in it for money is stupid. On the things Amazon does that I don't like, I don't support them there (for instance, I don't buy Kindle books). Woot, hasn't been an Amazon company all that terribly long, and for the most part has been unchanged by Amazon. Same people run it, in the same areas, and they do the same thing. They announced when they were bought out, don't hide that they were bought out, and nothing has changed, so why does it matter that Amazon owns them now? | 
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|  09-20-2011, 11:42 AM | #28 | |
| Tea Enthusiast            Posts: 8,554 Karma: 75384937 Join Date: Jul 2010 Location: Somewhere in the USA Device: Kindle1, Kindle DX Graphite, K3 3G, IPad 3, PW2 | Quote: 
 Agency pricing never made any sense to me because the Publishers made more money under the old system then the new system. I know that the Publishers think that the higher ebook prices will encourage people to buy the DTB but that is not happening. If the Publishers are making more money with Agency Pricing, then that is what they are going to do based on self interest. | |
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|  09-20-2011, 02:25 PM | #29 | |
| Banned            Posts: 2,391 Karma: 1001781 Join Date: May 2010 Device: The Nook, Nook color and Droid X | Quote: 
 How dare you post an article that does not protray the Great and Almighty AmaZOn in a beautiful light of the glory it deserves? Do you know what forum you are on? This is Mobileread.com. Amazon is the Almighty KING and nothing I MEAN NOTHING is better than the Kindle. Please have your post removed. | |
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|  09-20-2011, 02:28 PM | #30 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 28,880 Karma: 207000000 Join Date: Jan 2010 Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD | 
			
			Is Random House my friend? I forget.    | 
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