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#196 | |
Wizard
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Whether or not I'm indirectly responsible basically comes down to whether or not I was aware that when I asked for the file I was asking the uploader to commit copyright infringement on my behalf. In the case of the Kindle books, I don't think you can argue that the customer's were inducing Amazon to commit the infringement. They likely had no idea that the eBook they purchased was unauthorized, so the responsibility was solely Amazon's (and the original uploader to Amazon). |
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#197 | |
Wizard
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If the seller is not an authorized distributor then it is obvious they are committing infringement. But whether or not the buyer is guilty of indirect infringement depends on whether they were aware that the seller was committing infringement on their behalf when they asked for the book. Did the buyer know the book was copyrighted? Did the buyer know the seller was not an authorized distributor? ...etc. If you're saying that the downloader of an eBook is the one that creates the copy (which is impossible if you know how computer's work), then they are the one distributing. That would mean the uploader is not guilty of copyright infringement, only the downloader is. The uploader is engaged in "making available", but not the actual distribution. That's not how the law is written, and that's not how the current RIAA lawsuits are being done. The uploader is the one who is responsible for the direct copyright infringement. |
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#198 | |
Wizard
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You're right though, it's not very specific. |
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#199 | ||
Wizard
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#200 |
Wizard
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I think what likely happened is that Amazon knew they were exceeding their authority by deleting customer's books. They did it because it would decrease the chances that the owner would sue, and are probably assuming that the customers won't. It was a risk trade off.
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#201 | |
Connoisseur
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Device: Sony PRS 500 and Kindle 2 and iPad and iPhone
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Oh, well, anyway, who is John Galt ? |
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#202 | |
Connoisseur
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No, this doesn't invalidate copyright law, but it does make it irrelevant. It took me a little over an hour to acquire a rather nice OCR-ed copy of "Atlas Shrugged" quite free for my laptop, and adjust the type size to my liking. I am persuaded from reading these posts that most of you here could have done this in half the time or less! If you wanted to. So that's going to be an issue for Amazon, Sony, and copyright holders. This is big, kiddoes, e-books are huge. Gutenberg just moved sideways to a new platform, and we are here. Twenty-seven years ago I typed in a phrase on a keyboard on this little Kaypro box thingie, and hit a typo, and backspaced it out --- and dropped my hands and gasped. I knew the world had changed forever, a lot. I'm having the same feeling again; the world just made a big lurch forward in content availability, and there will be a lot of people rolled over if they don't watch out. |
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#203 | |
Connoisseur
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But because the book is so large that it's unwieldy and hard to print and bind legibly, it's a valuable property for Amazon's Kindle --- and the ARI. It's a case of it being substantially MORE valuable in eBook form than paperback, so ARI is probably trying to price it high. Just my guess. |
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#204 | |
Illiterate
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#205 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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#206 | |
Wizard
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There are basically two reasons that people get confused about who commits infringement in the digital world. (1) The mechanics are more convoluted. (2) The media industry is actively trying to create the impression that downloading is illegal. It's difficult to prosecute the ones who are really violating the law (uploaders), so they try to intimidate everyone else into not downloading. They want you to think you will get into trouble for just downloading, regardless of whether or not you actually will. |
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#207 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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It is analogous to a thief selling stolen property - the buyer can't acquire a property interest from the thief. All of this to make the point that the buyer of an unauthorized ebook does not have a lawsuit against Amazon for deleting the book, but rather, only a lawsuit for refund of the payment for the book. What is really bugging people is the idea that Amazon can just erase the book. But I think that the legal question is not whether Amazon had a "right" to do it, but rather, what exactly is the "wrong?" In other words, the buyer has to first articulate the basis of his or her legal claim against Amazon. What the buyer won't be able to say is "Amazon deleted my book" because the book is not "my" book. But the buyer CAN say "Amazon took my money by selling me a book it had no right to sell." Therefore, the buyer can sue for a refund. But I am unaware of any other claim that a buyer can make, unless there's some kind of tort (technical legal term for "claim for damages resulting from injury") involving "unauthorized access to electronic device." If there is such a tort, it is only then that we would have to address the question of whether Amazon nevertheless, under the TOS or for other reasons, has a "right" to access the K. Perhaps Amazon has no such "right," but the lack of such a right does not necessarily mean they couldn't do it. It really depends on whether the courts are going to say "yes, you are damaged by the mere fact that someone accesses your Kindle without your permission." Okay, let's suppose that's true. What is the measure of damage? It's not the deletion of a book in which you have no property interest. I'm not sure there's any actual damage you can point to. Even the refund claim really has nothing to do with accessing the Kindle. I think you would be entitled to a refund once it became clear that Amazon had no right to sell the book in the first place. Even if you still had the book on your Kindle! But assuming that there is some kind of "unauthorized access" tort, you know what? By activating Whispernet, I think we might be granting Amazon that access, legally speaking. So what would a court decide? Maybe (1) you granted Amazon access to your Kindle and (2) Amazon did not damage you by deleting a book you had no right to have. At this point, I'm not even sure that my earlier thought that there might be a punative damages claim of some kind holds any water. On the whole, I think that Amazon will get away with this, even if someone were to bring a lawsuit. |
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#208 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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But recently, it has appeared in a series (12 so far) of iphone apps, at 99 cents each. I figure that there are 55, plus or minus, potential apps, so the gross from these sales could approach 50 bucks for the same material in the VBP. Now let me tell you that Bone translates beautifully to the iPhone, and is much more accessible in that format than in print. So I think the extra cost is supported - and it is also made more palatable by being dribbled out across many small purchases. So serialization, in this case, adds value, and reduction to electronic format also adds value. Phebe, I think you've identified something here that is worthy of bearing your moniker: The "Phebook Factor," which comes into play when an ebook is more valuable than the pbook, for reasons having to do with greater ease of use or accessibility in electronic form. |
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#209 | |
Wizard
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#210 | |||
Grand Sorcerer
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I know of several books that were pulled from publication after successful copyright infringement lawsuits... in no cases were customers required to return the books. The infringement lay entirely with the company that had produced the books without proper clearances, not the people who bought those productions. This is the key point: there IS precedent to build from; this is hardly the first time a rights holder has complained about a book sale, and gotten the book removed from publication. I don't believe the books already sold ever had to be returned in other cases. Quote:
I'll grant that's a stretch. (However, the lack of clear TOS about the Kindle may be actionable in itself, separate from this; the fact that they mislead customers about how it works and what right they have, could be fraudulent.) Quote:
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