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View Poll Results: Could the Kindle spark book piracy? | |||
Yes, book piracy will get a boost thanks to successful Kindle sales |
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26 | 20.16% |
On the contrary, since it's now even easier and cheaper to purchase e-books |
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46 | 35.66% |
No, there won't be any change. |
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57 | 44.19% |
Voters: 129. You may not vote on this poll |
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#286 | |
The Introvert
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: United Kingdom
Device: Sony Reader PRS-650 & 505 & 500
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Quote:
Let's put it straight forward - *.lit books are in a way DRM free. It means that whatever you can buy in this format should be all over the darknet - accordingly to all the publishers who say that they NEED DRM in order to protect the content from being pirated. However, I find it ammusing that you find next to nothing of real *.lit files on the darknet. What does it prove? |
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#287 | |
Gadget Geek
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: Paperwhite, Kindle 3 (retired), Skindle 1.2 (retired)
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I was reminded of this post this morning while listening to my local public radio station. They had a story on the light rail in LA which uses the honor system. They had a study which said that 11% of patrons routinely do not pay. I don't know what the methodology was but for the sake of argument I'll just accept it as accurate as well as their estimated loss from this behavior of $5.5M. To combat this, they are proposing to install turnstiles at the cost of $30M with an estimated $1M of annual maintenance. This seems so ludicrous to me. Even if you assume that 11% will remain customers once they force people to pay and you will indeed recover that $5.5M and not lose any of the remaining 89% of honest paying customers when you make things slower and tougher for them, the cost really doesn't balance especially when you consider these capital "improvements" are normally done with bond money. Even if they paid cash, the break even point is around 6.5 years. What's the lifespan of the turnstiles? What other improvement could the money be used for? How many of those 11% would be too poor to afford the ticket? It could be a social benefit to allow them free access. It's like the DRM-mentality in so many ways. They just see the fact that someone's getting something for free, not the fact that they may be throwing $10 at a $1 problem and hurting their own product in the process.
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Last edited by Alisa; 12-19-2007 at 05:53 PM. |
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#288 |
Guru
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Karma: 2347
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: NYC
Device: Sony Reader, nook, Droid, nookColor, nookTablet
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I sure would love to see the methodology used to arrive at that figure. Off hand, it strikes me as high.
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#289 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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Karma: 93383099
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: UK
Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6
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#290 |
fruminous edugeek
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Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Northeast US
Device: iPad, eBw 1150
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No street cred to distributing a file that the lit DRM has been stripped out of. It's too easy. Therefore, it has no value in the gift-giving economy of the darknet.
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#291 |
Wizard
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Karma: 1008294
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Iowa, USA
Device: Nook Simple Touch
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A month or so ago the Band Radiohead let its fans decide how much to pay for a digital copy of the band's latest release, "In Rainbows," from their website. More than half of those who downloaded the album chose to pay nothing.
62 percent of the people who downloaded "In Rainbows" in a four- week period last month opted not to pay the British alt-rockers a cent. But the remaining 38 percent voluntarily paid an average of $6. Would those same 62% have downloaded the cd illegally had it not been offered? |
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#292 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 7185064
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Linköpng, Sweden
Device: Kindle Voyage, Nexus 5, Kindle PW
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What does this example show? I assume that for an ordinary CD were people give copies to some friends also have a large percentage of people that have a copy but have not payed for it. So without looking at the absolute numbers you cannot say anything about this example. Also when a thing is new people download stuff just to check if they like this music or not.
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#293 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 1008294
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Iowa, USA
Device: Nook Simple Touch
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Just an interesting social experiment. The band is calling the experiment a success while the recording industry is calling it a failure. What if ebooks were sold in this manner, we pay as to how well we liked them or not, would it work?
By the way this story is well documented, you can search for all the numbers and examine them Quote:
Last edited by Ervserver; 12-22-2007 at 08:43 AM. |
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#294 |
fruminous edugeek
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Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Northeast US
Device: iPad, eBw 1150
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I think what it shows is that the band is satisfied with a different level of return than the music industry.
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#295 | |
Addict
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Karma: 582
Join Date: Aug 2006
Device: Zire71
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Quote:
I hate those outrageous claims, like Microsoft loosing billions in China due to piracy. How many users in China can affors $500+ for Office? Is Microsoft on drugs? Of course, now they have special pricing for China, fraction of a cost in North America. How is that suppose to make us feel here paying hundreds of dollars for their software. Hollywood is even worse. Computer software is often a necessity. Music and movies are a luxury. If they did stop all piracy in China and other poor countries they certainly would not see many more billions coming from there. It is a joke. Meanwhile anti-piracy measures like DRM have a far greater effect on law abiding paying customers than poor people who cannot afford to pay high prices. They still go to their pirates and pay the same minimal price regardless of the latest DRM. No change. Yeah, at some point they need to look at the bigger picture and discover they are chasing that last cent, past the point of diminishing returns. There is only so much money people have available. |
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