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#271 | |||
Grand Sorcerer
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Device: Pocketbook
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#272 |
Grand Sorcerer
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No, but a lack of copyright, security, compensation or other protections will surely doom the remaining 5%.
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#273 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jan 2006
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The thing about advertisement-subsidizing is that it socializes content cost. Maybe you didn't directly pay for it... but the next guy did, when he responded to an ad and bought something. And maybe you responded to an ad and bought something, thereby paying for content someone else perused. But all of that is essentially spreading the costs among multiple coffers... IOW, you pay for it indirectly. And in most cases, those distributed indirect costs, if they were capable of being isolated, tend to be more than the direct cost. But since it's spread over enough people to bring individual costs way down, and most people don't intuitively make those connections, it seems as if it's cheap or free to the individual, and consumers are thereby placated. Just one of the psycho-socially-engineered ways in which content is paid for. For the record, though, a pirate site may collect money, or at least cost you money to access, but absolutely none of that money will go to the creator. |
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#274 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 25133758
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA
Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié)
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It's still difficult to set up a business selling other people's copyrighted works without permission. (At least, it's difficult to do so if those works are less than 50 years old. Older works just aren't carefully watched, except for a few high-profile cases.) It is, however, increasingly easy to copy works for free, and it's never going to get harder to do so. Definitely a key point to keep in mind: Digital copies will never be harder to make than they are right now. Future applications of copyright law need to acknowledge that. Copyright may shift to a system where only economic control is permitted, and free use is unrestricted. (I don't think that's a good idea.) Or publishers may offer bells-and-whistles versions that are hard to reproduce--ebooks with links to a verified website with author interviews or additional, non-downloadable notes; interactive movie DVDs that require info set by the seller at time of purchase. But those won't dissuade customers who just want the basic book or movie content. One of the first things ebook publishers need to do to counter piracy, is to make sure their versions are BETTER than scanned-and-OCRd versions thrown around on the darknet. If the mainstream published version looks no different from the bootleg, there's a lot less incentive to put up with DRM; combine that with "oh, you can't transfer it to your new computer" and people will go looking for the pirate version. Another potential solution is changing the penalty system for copyright infringement--marking a difference between individual misuse and corporate exploitation. A penalty of $50 per file wouldn't create the furor and martyrdom that the current range of penalties does ("hey look! I moved 783 kb of text from one computer to another and now I'm worth $150,000 to the right person!"). Treat minor copyright infringement like petty theft, punish accordingly, and stop turning low-grade hackers into folk heroes who can claim to have caused $2mil of economic chaos. |
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#275 | ||
Wizard
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: The Pacific NW
Device: sony PRS350, iPhone, iPad
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I bet if you looked at the number of authors who submit manuscripts (whether they get published or not) vs the number of authors who make a living solely from their writing, the odds look pretty poor for writers. I used to feel the same way as a lot of posters about copyright and royalties...then I spent some time reading Colleen Doran's blog, where she's quite forthcoming about the struggles of trying to support yourself with artistic work (in her case she draws and writes comic books). It was quite an eye-opener. In one article in her blog she says: Quote:
I'm not saying I agree 100% with everything Steve is saying.....but writers need more than good reviews and a pat on the back to keep writing. People who steal income from authors are also stealing from all of us who hope that our favorite writers continue to produce work for us to read. The way writers gain income from books may change as technology changes, but they've got to be able to support themselves or we'll see a lot less writing. |
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#276 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Thanks... I guess...
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#277 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Linköpng, Sweden
Device: Kindle Voyage, Nexus 5, Kindle PW
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Seeing a lot less of the bad writing might be a good thing. I do not see why we must support all the people that want to write. Should that principle hold for anything a person want to do? |
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#278 |
Wizard
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Karma: 4132096
Join Date: Sep 2008
Device: Kindle Paperwhite/iOS Kindle App
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Are you actually serious? I honestly can't tell if you mean this statement as a joke or not. If you really are serious about this, you've just lost me as a customer, at any rate. What an offensive thing to say in a thread where dozens, including me, have said that we do pay for our books, we want to pay for them, and all we want is for the publishing industry to set up mechanisms where we can do this in a fair and encumbered way. If you meant this statement as a joke, please clarify what exactly you are getting at here because honestly, I'm a little offended.
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#279 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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But when you say "fair and (un?)encumbered," is that to mean fair to you? Or am I included? Because, frankly, you have no idea how insulted I am by this thread... Quote:
If it was only the bad writing we'd see less of, that might be one thing (though who are you to judge?). But you won't just be losing "bad" writers... you'll also be losing "good" writers who can no longer make a living in your "free book" world. Or did you just assume that all popular writers are "bad"? |
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#280 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 4132096
Join Date: Sep 2008
Device: Kindle Paperwhite/iOS Kindle App
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I don't 'pirate' books in cases like these because I do believe in paying authors. But I *do* vote with my wallet and just read other things and buy from other authors. There are definitely authors who have lost otherwise sure sales from me for this reason. Rather than focusing their efforts on the people who aren't going to be a sale---non-readers, and the tiny percentage that 'pirate' who nothing you do will stop them, it seems to me publishers would be better served focusing their efforts on making it as easy as possible for those who may actually be a customer to BE a customer. Offer the books for sale in print, in ebook, however people want them. Offer them unencumbered by DRM so that people can enjoy them on the device of their choosing. Make them affordable for the average reader and make them as easy to get and use as possible. THAT is the way to save the publishing industry. iTunes has sold a billion downloads. People WILL pay for books, Steve. But overly protectionist authors who are so scared of the mythical 'pirate' that they don't even offer the books (see: JK Rowling) have no right to complain that nobody is buying. You have to start by giving the customers a sensible, reasonable option. |
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#281 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 25133758
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA
Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié)
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![]() As much as I enjoy a great deal of fantastic writing that's available for free, I know it's outweight more than tenfold by atrocious writing. Sturgeon's law applies to professional work; for amateurs and students, it's probably closer to 99% that's worthless. |
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#282 | |
Exwyzeeologist
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Karma: 3261
Join Date: Jun 2009
Device: :PRS-505::iPod touch:
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#283 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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It's always good to cater to your customers as much as possible. But it's also a good idea to try to draw in more customers, including those "no-sales," and convert them to "sales." In many cases, existing customers will buy more if some of their criteria are met. But meet the right ones, and you just might encourage everyone to buy. And the more people you bring in, the more you'll find out about the customers, potential customers, and your actual market, and stop guessing about what's going on. So, even though I don't use tools that tend to drive away customers, I still concern myself with those "no-sales," to the extent that I'd like to find out why they didn't buy, to see if I can offer something that will make them buy. Maybe I can write material they prefer (or just write better). Maybe I can offer another e-book format. Maybe I'm offering too many formats, and need to cut the confusion. Maybe I need to offer free porn. Maybe lowering my prices below $2.50 will make customers swarm like locusts! Or maybe I just talk too much. I don't know. But I'm willing to see what I can try. |
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#284 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 17500000
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: The Pacific NW
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And what kind of output will your good, passionate writers have? Someone who writes solely because they love it still has to eat. Someone who is out working a 40 hour job and is squeezing in writing on top of it is clearly going to write far fewer pages than someone who can spend that 40 hours a week writing. I like to read those big thick multi-volume fantasy epics - I don't see how anyone could ever finish one while holding down a day job. I've been reading "Grumbles from the Grave" by Robert Heinlein recently. As far as I can tell from his own accounts, he was not a man who wrote because he "loved" it. He wrote because he wanted the income, and he was talented enough and prolific enough to ensure that he made enough to support himself. In a "free book" world, we wouldn't have any of his works. He would have probably been working as an engineer at some government base instead. |
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#285 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Benefit for working stiffs are just another form of income. You want a 401K? Guess what? You stuff your money into it. If the company matches it, they could just as well pay you the same cash, because they are paying it out anyway. All benefits for working stiffs are just another form of compensation, that goes away forever when you do.... You want a pension as a writer? You can buy an annuity as you go, and it's probably safer that a corporate pension.
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