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#361 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Frankly, I'm at a loss to figure out how to go about making anything more than lunch money in digital publishing without some amount of protection, and not be accused of being a Nazi sympathizer. If I have concerns about the protection of my intellectual property rights, what do you propose I do about it? |
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#362 | |
Sir Penguin of Edinburgh
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#363 | |
New York Editor
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He wasn't trying to be a bad guy or line his own pockets. He was trying to prove his worth as a trader, make money for his company, and get raises and promotions. He started out well, but when his bets turned sour he didn't know what to do. The fix there isn't the systems -- it's addressing the corporate culture that encourages that sort of behavior. (Though fiddling with the systems to attempt to provide more control will be seen as a lot easier.) ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 06-24-2008 at 12:23 PM. |
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#364 | ||||
zeldinha zippy zeldissima
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i don't accept that my --in fact, the entire world's-- personal freedom and privacy should be compromised because you think your earning money should take precedence, especially since as so many have explained already there is no reason to believe that the two are at all linked. you yourself have acknowledged that despite your inexplicable alarmist tendencies, your books which are available illegally online continue to sell as well as or better than the others : Quote:
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#365 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#366 |
Grand Sorcerer
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So: The answer to overcoming copyright concerns is to sue everybody? Not particularly helpful, that. (Though I guess it would go with the jackboots I've already been fitted for.)
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#367 | |
New York Editor
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The underlying question is "Do you trust your market?" Do you assume they are for the most part honest, ethical, and willing to pay for value, or do you assume they will cheerfully rip you off given an opportunity? Yep, your work can be posted to the darknet. So what? How much lost revenue does that cost you? How do you know? (Frankly, you don't know, and you can't know. There is no way you can measure how many folks download from the darknet and read a book of yours instead of buying a copy from you.) And DRM is a flimsy protection, given the folks who seem to live to crack such things. The way you make more than lunch money from your writing is the way any writer does, from electronic or paper editions -- get higher sales. There's no magic process to insure that. You do what you are doing now, promoting yourself, making yourself as visible as possible to the sort of folks who might like your work, and try to grow your audience to the point where the income is more significant. Growing your audience helps with the darknet as well. My assumption is that the darknet is a fairly small fraction of the total market. I think most folks are willing to pay for stuff they like. The more folks you reach, the larger the percentage who will buy rather than search the darknet for an illicit copy. _______ Dennis |
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#368 | |
New York Editor
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Lawsuit may be necessary, but it's not the answer. You sue if someone infringes, claiming work you did as their own. It's not a deterrent against simple theft. ______ Dennis |
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#369 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
MIA ... but returning som
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I appologize in advance for the political and long response.
1. There is nothing more important than human rights and the rights of citizens. NOTHING. The right to live is a direct result from the human rights. 2. No. The protection of a state is NOT more important then human rights. Not the citizen should protect the state - the state should protect the citizen. That is the ONLY reason a state exists. Thus - I dont have to give up freedom to protect a state. At the most I have to give up freedom to protect other peoples right. I wont even think about discussing those points. They are just matter of fact statements to help understanding my point of view. Quote:
No amount of censorship or national despotism could change that. And thus there is NO reason for censorship or despotism. Quote:
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1. They wasnt able to close their borders completely - only making it hard to pass the filters Quote:
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There is NO absolute security, there can never be absolute security and longing for it can only destroy freedom and live. A friend of mine works as "white hacker". That means: He hacks computer systems for a living, testing the security measures. So far he hasnt found a single computer system that was safe. And yes, he has tested some that should be. Not a single one - that means: Those government systems that save all your nice data - the data you want to get saved - arent save as well. Examples of data loss from government systems are more then common - e.g. through technical problems or human mistakes like letting a notebook lie in the train, etc @DMcCunney: I agree to your last two posts. |
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#370 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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When I mention China, it is not with the idea that we should emulate their political system, nor have I ever advocated such... it is held up as only one example of the fact that the internet, like any communications entity, can be regulated by an authority. If you're so frightened of the very idea of "emulating" China, then fine... don't. Instead, you can emulate the corporate, democratic, capitalistic practices of Verizon and Comcast, who exercise monopolistic control of their communications systems, collect data on who we speak to and what we watch, hold our credit card numbers, can disconnect us at their whim, can refuse us access to communications lines at will, and are answerable to no public entity. And who, I notice, don't have particularly large crowds with torches and pitchforks at their door, protesting their actions. They do, however, have government regulations to answer to (thin as they are), preventing them from running rampant over us and charging $30 for a 2-minute call across town. And look... I'm not handcuffed to my cellphone. I can disable the built-in GPS system. I can even (shudder) turn it off at will. Government regulations accomplished that... not the desires of the phone company. If you really believe that taking steps to protect my intellectual property can only result in the world's population being manacled to their chairs, cameras pointed at them 24-7, and forced to watch propaganda videos until they are sufficiently brainwashed, I can only say that it will take much, much more than a few authors' desire to make a few bucks to accomplish that. If, on the other hand, you see nothing wrong with a clearly broken system that presently upsets creators, publishers, and consumers alike, and gives no sign that it will magically fix itself, then I suppose you'd enjoy an e-book market that will see no appreciable progress, other than the Kindle, for the next 10 years. But let's try to keep clear heads here, stop accusing each other of being monsters, and discuss the matter at hand. Quote:
This is why I have embraced e-books. However, e-books provide no protection to my intellectual property... they are the equivalent of attaching the complete recipe for Coca-Cola onto the side of the bottle. This also means that my IP is more at-risk than a print published author, who makes the bulk of their money off of print products, which in turn circulate through a Big Publishing machine already regulated to limit intellectual infringement and theft, and can therefore afford to give e-books away for free. Using the drinks analogy, their Pepsi product is being dispensed at the bar that everyone already patronizes, no recipe for patrons, just a logo and a bill. And the bar doesn't want to sell my Coca-Cola, since they have Pepsi. Patrons can't go home and recreate Pepsi... but they can go home and recreate my Coke, because the recipe is right there. Of course, they probably won't ever find out about my Coke. But if they do, and it actually turns out to be more desirable than Pepsi, there will be nothing stopping someone else from recreating, rebranding and selling my Coke and making the money from my recipe. Because my IP has no protection. So: How do I compete with the makers of Pepsi, as well as the makers of Koack? Should I have no legal recourse to protecting my Coke recipe from bootleggers? Is it right for the Big Guys and the thieves to just walk all over me, steal my product, and leave me with scraps? In short, am I condemned to be the small fish in the big pond, with no hope but that I don't see the big fish coming that inevitably gobbles me up? (Minor point: I am a citizen, too.) |
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#371 | ||||||||||
MIA ... but returning som
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Censorship as in "locking out unwanted traffic". Quote:
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#372 | |||
New York Editor
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Some totalitarian regimes stem from the upper class, attempting to preserve and extend existing power. Others stem from the lower classes, arising after successful attempts to depose the former regime and et a better deal for themselves. Fascism tends to stem from the middle class, and is a centrist, not radical, phenomenon. Quote:
Different societies have different pattern, and different practices. Things which may seem inexplicable to us happen because, at least at some point, they promoted the survival of the society that practices them. The key point is that the survival of the society is paramount. The individual may not matter. We live in and stem from a culture where the individual is important. The critical social unit in China is the family, and the society is based, in part, on a web of relationships between families. Families matter. Individuals generally don't. Another point to keep in mind is that the system in which you are raised becomes the right and proper one. Consider the custom of arranged marriages. In places that practice them, the marriage is a political and economic alliance between two families, arranged by the families, for the benefit of the families. The wishes of the bride and groom are generally irrelevant to the decision. And for folks growing up in such a system, it's the way things are done, and our practice of marriage being a love match between a man and a woman may be seen as just this side of crazy. Quote:
______ Dennis |
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#373 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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But in the present internet, no practical way to enforce that law. So what good is it? There might as well be no law at all. |
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#374 | ||||
MIA ... but returning som
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Nothing against chinese or china in principal - I just dont know enough about chines politic or tradition and I dont like to judge people by the politics of their nation. I know something about their handling of the internet - and I dont like it. Quote:
If the individual is too important, a society cannot prosper. But - if the individual is too unimportant, the society will - ultimately - die. Quote:
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#375 | |||
New York Editor
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______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 06-24-2008 at 02:35 PM. |
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