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#241 | |
Wizard
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To be clear, I'm not ascribing a moral reasoning behind the action of either the publisher or the library. One is restricting the number of copies, the other is removing them entirely. These are, as you say, business decisions. Call it what you will, I still find it a bad move for the library. |
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#242 |
Groupie
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I believe McMillan treats an entire library system with many branches as one entity for the embargo period. Thus, the entire city of New York would get only one ebook copy for the millions who live there? Not even one ebook for each branch. This is not enough product for the services and demand library clients expect. They aren't asking for a handout, they want to buy ebooks for their clients.
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#243 | |
Wizard
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There are, approximately, 8.55 million people in NYC. So assuming even distribution that's 2.85 per branch. I can't find figures for how many ebooks specifically are checked out a year, the only figure I found stated the combined libraries saw 8.8 million check outs, though it was not clear if this was physical and ebook. Either way it's barely more than one book per person per year. Which says to me that it's more likely large amounts of the population are not checking books out at all, while a smaller selection check out some, and a still smaller check out many. Then you also have to remember that not everyone is going to want the same book. Finally it's only one book for a short window, and then it's however many the library wishes to buy. So claims of "one book can't possibly serve a population the size of NYC" are arguably true, assuming that it was really only one book and that everyone wanted it, but neither of those are the case. Reducing that argument to hyperbolic rhetoric. |
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#244 | |
Wizard
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I get the feeling that this policy is driven by the big hits; those books that everyone is talking about and that everyone wants to read together. The embargo is probably meant to cover the period of those books' popularity, thus forcing more sales when the books are a cultural phenomenon. From the libraries viewpoint, it may not make sense to obtain one copy and then see how many people put it on hold during that period. They aren't going to get an adequate number of copies until the hype starts to cool down, so why not just wait until then before offering it up for borrowing? A lot of people who wanted it when everyone was talking about a book won't want it afterwards, because they only read the odd book when it is hot. For them, it will be a wasted loan. Put the book up for borrowing only when you can get the number you need, and decide then what number you should buy based on demand at that time. That seems like a sensible reason to not offer a book for borrowing during the embargo period. |
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#245 | |
Is that a sandwich?
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New York Public Library 4+ million Brooklyn 1+ million Queens <1 million |
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#246 | |
Wizard
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The embargo the publisher is enforcing is likely driven by getting sales yes. I'd say not buying a license within the embargo period would be better than not buying at all. But it'd be better for both the publisher and the library. The library because they can then get a better feel for how popular the book still is after the initial hype. And the publisher because this would be like a second release day, it could stir up new hype from those library patrons who will never buy a book and those willing to wait. |
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#247 |
Grand Sorcerer
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There is a book that attempts to answer that question. "The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion" by Jonathan Haidt. It sounds like a political book, but Haidt is actually a psychologist.
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#248 | |
Groupie
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#249 | |
Wizard
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The library better buy 2 million licenses for every ebook so everyone can read the book in those 8 weeks. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Last edited by MGlitch; 10-28-2019 at 10:59 PM. |
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#250 | |
Wizard
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If the publisher can afford to lose the library as customer for ebooks, they will change nothing. If they find out after a while that their embargo is counterproductive, they have to please the library to get them back as customer. By limiting to one copy they are not hurting the few that use the library to save money, but regular users that cannot just simply buy. It is also a statement that you cannot simply push the library around. Ebooks are already more lucrative for the publisher than pbooks. Now the library is also responsible for "stealing customers". It doesn't appear to be a problem with paper, just ebooks. Maybe, just maybe, the problem of their inability to sell ebooks to customers has other more pressing reasons than the library. |
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#251 | ||||
Wizard
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As I've mentioned, physical books impose many of the same restrictions by their very nature on libraries. There is only so much space a library has to store them. They do not automagically get returned exactly at their due time if not before, really the list goes on. So the publishers imposing a limit to ebooks is bringing them more in line with ebooks in terms of the libraries ability to distribute. And as to your question, why should the library bow to the will of the publisher no matter what the publisher says. They shouldn't, I never said they should. I said the tactic of not buying books is foolish for the library. I've stated several times that libraries as a whole were doing a good job with the media in terms of crafting a narrative before this single library decided to not buy ebooks from Macmillan. Last edited by MGlitch; 10-29-2019 at 02:21 AM. |
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#252 | |
Interested Bystander
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One nuance I hadn't realized is that the single license available in the first 8 weeks is a perpetual one, not time or loans limited like the additional licenses will be.
That is actually a good long term benefit to the library, they can maintain a copy of less popular books for ever with no renewal cost. Quote:
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#253 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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So it really doesn't take all that long to get a rather long wait list. The thing I'd like to see is all libraries with a 3 week borrow dump that for a 2 week borrow as 3 weeks is too long. |
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#254 |
purpose priority passion
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am i alone in thinking that it's reasonable for publishers to try and make money for just the first 8 weeks? this is the same thing that happens with movies in theatres. if they release dvds/blurays for purchase right away, theatre attendance will be reduced dramatically. why do you think publishers shouldn't do this? it's just for 8 weeks. is this too much to ask?
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#255 | |
Wizard
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