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#121 |
Literacy = Understanding
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Even if they had a constant feed, they would have no way of knowing whether Amazon sold 100 or 1,000 copies at the sale price. The wholesale price that Amazon pays the publisher would not change based on Amazon's selling price. In addition, there is no way to know, in the absence of data from Amazon, how much money Amazon collected for a particular publisher's books. The only thing a publisher would know is that in the gross, Amazon sold x copies and paid y wholesale price for those copies.
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#122 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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But that's a *lot* of record-keeping. I doubt publishers intend to track exactly what sold at what time at what price... they want Amazon to give them aggregate data by day or month, and just tell them how many books sold at what prices. If they're not careful in their contract arrangements, Amazon might hand them a spreadsheet showing every single sale for all a publisher's books--ISBN/Title/Author/Retail price/time of sale--and leave it to the publisher to sort out individual titles and discount amounts. |
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#123 |
Resident Curmudgeon
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If the terms say eBooks cannot be sold at a loss, then the sellers would have to give up the records of the eBook sales in order to satisfy this. That includes Amazon.
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#124 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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There's a big difference between "sellers are required to hand over that data because of a DOJ settlement," which is not the situation, and "future contracts between seller & publisher will include a section about data the seller is required to hand over"--which is possible, but gives Amazon leverage that the publishers don't want. It's possible that the sales statements Amazon already hands over includes that data as a matter of course, in which case, publishers will have an easy time of it. However, again, there's a difference between "this data has always been available" and "this data will always be available in the future." A shift in Amazon's accounting or reporting software could change that. |
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#125 | ||
Wizard
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Boil it down to bullet points : 1.The publishers need detailed sales data to calculate whether a publisher exceeds its"discount quota". 2. The retailers don't provide such data now, and won't, unless ordered by the courts. 3. The courts don't have the legal authority to order retailers to do this, since they are not in the lawsuit. 4. Even if the publisher could correctly calculate the "discount quota", its unclear what the remedy is. 5. Even if 1-4 could be fixed, its unclear who would have a right to recover. Now can all that be fixed? Maybe-there's some smart folks over at the DOJ. What's clear though, is that there's more work to do to make the settlement into a legally enforceable process. Why does all this matter? Because the settlement must be accepted by the judge in order for it to go into force.The judge may just reject the settlement if she thinks its going to unenforceable or otherwise unacceptable. An example of this is the Google book-scanning case. The judge has twice rejected settlement proposals and has cleared the way for the lawsuit to proceed. Until the judge in the current case accepts the settlement, all existing arrangements will remain in force-which means no changes in prices . The process of settlement renegotiation may take months, or even years-assuming that they can fix the problems detailed above . Last edited by stonetools; 06-11-2012 at 11:29 AM. |
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#126 | ||||
Grand Sorcerer
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I could see other bookstores being the harmed parties... but they don't have access to the data that would be necessary to bring a case. |
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#127 | |
Interested Bystander
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Plus the right to appoint an independent auditor to validate the numbers. (Which I don't think would be an unusual contract term.) Where it does get complicated is with things like gift vouchers, store credit and so on. Simplistically you would simply not include those in the total amount figures, which would overstate the discounting applied. |
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#129 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Suppose that Amazon paid a billion dollars for eBooks, and sold them to customers for a billion dollars.
They actually would be losing a lot on those books for reasons such as: -- Payments to credit card companies. -- Costs of their data processing infrastructure -- Cost of funds (Amazon doesn't have a lot of corporate debt, but they have some) -- Taxes (if no profit, you don't pay corporate income tax, but there are other taxes) -- General corporate expenses ranging from rent to salaries to paying your law and accounting firms Some of these expenses would be incurred even if they stopped selling eBooks. The question then becomes the extent to which a line of business, such as eBooks, is responsible for overall corporate expenses. It seems to me that figuring out whether books are being sold at a loss is complex and filled with judgment calls. |
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#130 | |
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It is a way of 'protecting' ebooks prices, not a way of preventing Amazon out-discounting other retailers. Last edited by murraypaul; 06-14-2012 at 04:44 AM. |
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#131 |
Resident Curmudgeon
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The way I look at it, the current contracts will be null and void and a new one will have to be drawn up and signed. Now, in these new contracts, a provision to hand over sales data could be added in and if Amazon won't agree to that, they don't get to sell the eBooks from the price fix six. It's as easy as that.
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#132 | |
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#133 |
Wizard
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Maybe the DOJ can weigh in and say that if the retailers refuse to provide the necessary data, the retailers don't get to discount from the publisher set price. Things are still fluid and the DOJ can still tweak the terms.
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#134 |
Interested Bystander
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The retailers are not party to the settlement.
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#135 |
Wizard
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Yeah, but the publishers are. The DOJ can tell the publishers " If the retailers don't agree to provide the necessary data, you don't have to allow them to discount.In effect, you can go back to full agency".
IOW, if the retailers want the benefits of the settlement ( freedom to discount), they are going to have to play by the settlement 's rules (hand over detailed sales data). |
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