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#376 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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The creator has the right to restrict copies--but that right has always been limited by the resources of the people willing to make unauthorized copies. Before the digital age, there was no inspector checking every box of books shipped to a store, confirming that the publisher had the right to copy those books, nor did an inspector visit consumer's homes to confirm that they weren't writing out those books by hand and sending unauthorized copies to friends. It was *always* possible to get a "free" copy by convincing someone to do the copying. Copying got cheaper. That doesn't change the nature of the laws involved. Doesn't change what rights the creators have. It may change how they can enforce those rights, but doesn't change what they are. There is no reason that, in order to enforce those rights, the public should allow them to claim *new* rights--preventing loaning and resale of creative content. |
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#377 | |||
Wizard
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As I said before, copyright law is what protects the creator, not DRM. DRM is in place to protect the middlemen. Whether you believe it's intentional or not, it is certainly interesting that the DRM which the middlemen create to protect their rights also takes away rights from the consumers. It becomes very suspicious when there is no inherent reason that it must do so. I'm certainly not against creator's rights. But I'm definitely against the industry using DRM as another method to grab more power for themselves. |
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#378 | ||
Wizard
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It does duplicate those rights, up until the point that it only allows you to do so one time. That is a simple software limitation that should be easy to remove, if they wanted to do so. Quote:
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#379 |
Wizard
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DRM already tracks eBooks sales. Everytime you buy/download an eBook you have an individual file that can only be unlocked by an individual key. How else do you think they do that without managing it by individual sale?
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#380 | |
Banned
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(Several other meanings of what I said, but that's just be being too cute for my own good) And Kenny, that this is "copyright". In music, artists are doing just fine under the current system. It's not so good for the record companies, but copyright is not there for the companies. What "different" needs to be done? How are you going to "protect" artists rights, given they seem to be doing just fine? It sounds very much like you want to push back invasive forms of DRM onto all digital media, which will just crash sales in favour of the darknet. The market has reacted strongly against consumer DRM. This is no coincidence, and once more it does nothing for the economic value of an artist's works or his Moral Rights. |
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#381 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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But to really get to the core of what you are asserting. Regardless of being on the board or not, why would a publisher want to specifically prevent you from sharing a book? You are claiming that they are intentionally taking that right away from the consumer. Why, what purpose of the publisher would that server, what benefit or monetary gain is to be made from it? |
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#382 | |
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Look, I understand you are trying to be fair to everyone here, but try not to bend the devils advocate position so far that you poke yourself ![]() |
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#383 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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True, because copies can be made easily that does not change the law, but changes in technology often result in changes to the law. That could very well be the ultimate result. I don't know. Any change technological or otherwise ofter result in changes to laws to continue to enforce the intent of that law. Copyright law itself has changed many times (good and bad) due to changes in society, technology, etc. As I said the industry is in flux due to the change in format/technology. The laws have not changed, the publishers have chosen the current method (DRM) in an attempt to protect the author's rights in the current environment. The is no reason to assume that rights associated with one form or format apply equally to another form. The formats are inherently different and must be managed differently. You can travel across town by Bus, Car or Bicycle they all result in the same goal to travel across town but the rights and laws applicable to each one is different. |
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#384 |
Banned
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Of course copyright law does.
First sales Doctrine / Exhaustion of Rights. |
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#385 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Presumably, they think they will sell more books if their customers can't share the ones they have. |
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#386 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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My question is not whether they are or are not doing it (clearly some are based on your information) but what would be the benefit to them to specifically limit this right to share or sell books in the same manner as pbooks? I can't see any. If you can please point it out. I refuse to believe that they would just do it for malice, corporations don't do that, the are driven by the bottom line. |
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#387 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Adobe can authorize a new device, and un-authorize an old one--why can't their servers shift DRM ownership of a particular ebook to a new device, instead of an entire account at once? Why didn't publishers insist on *that* programming, instead of a new DRM method only usable on a few readers? They're not doing it for "malice." They're doing it for *greed*--they don't want to allow a secondhand market for ebooks, neither free or sold. They have the technology to make it difficult to hand off an ebook to a friend when you're done, so they implement that, regardless of the consumer's right to resell what they've bought. Publishers have convinced themselves that it's wrong to transfer ownership of ebooks, that an ebook is not like a physical book, but more like a single-person license to access content. Every action they take supports this claim. However, US legal rulings disagree; their economic model treats ebooks as sales, therefore they are legally sales. |
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#388 | |
Enthusiast
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That's why they are doing it...greed, money, sales figures, stock prices.... If you can't borrow a book, you have to buy it...or steal it... They are hoping you'll buy it if they make borrowing it difficult enough...but I think they are making an error in judgment... |
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#389 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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#2 perhaps that is the reasoning they are thinking it is a lost sale and they would actually sell another copy. That may or may be true, but I'll agree it could be the reasoning wrt selling a book but loaning a book should still be of no concern to them other that it would have the potential to sell additional books so you would think that would be pushing for it. (B&N apparently did). |
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#390 | |
The Dank Side of the Moon
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All DRM and restrictions do for me is piss me off. ![]() |
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