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View Poll Results: Ebook piracy and your thoughts | |||
Who takes e-books for free, actually work for a living? |
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10 | 45.45% |
Who works for a living believe they deserve every penny of what they get? |
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8 | 36.36% |
Would you work for free if you won't be paid? |
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9 | 40.91% |
Should strangers dictate author's wages? |
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13 | 59.09% |
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 22. You may not vote on this poll |
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#76 | ||
fruminous edugeek
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Join Date: Oct 2006
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Not that that has ever stopped the crowd before... ![]() ![]() |
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#77 | |
Bit Wrangler
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Device: Sony PRS-505
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Your poll results seem to indicate...
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I see this a lot in these polls...the questions are weirdly worded and have a lot of wiggle room ![]() I guess it depends on the point you are trying to make. There is only one definite negative answer and the two answers with the largest amount of responses clearly could overlap a bit. Most importantly tho, is we have a sample pool of lest than 100 people here ![]() At any rate music has a few other advantages in its digital form over an ebook and is priced less. Do with that what you will ![]() |
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#78 | |
Kindlephilia
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Snowpacolypse 2010
Device: Too many to count
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Yes, I would love to pay a lower price for ebooks just as one pays less for a paperback than for a hardcover. My justification for paying higher prices is that if I really want to save money then I can wait until the price comes down or hope the library gets a copy. It's actually easier for me to justify purchasing ebooks since they require no physical space to store. I have so many legitimately acquired ebooks in my reading queue that the Darknet holds little attraction for me. |
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#79 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I wouldn't buy a $15 e-book... because I believe $15 is too much for an e-book (or a paperback, for that matter), even if I really want to read it. The author's profit margins have absolutely no concern to me, any more than what car he drives or what color underwear he prefers. Besides, the amount of the book doesn't directly indicate the author's profits, since you don't know his actual costs, whether he employs help (and at what salary), pays an agent, is putting his kids through college, etc. So all you can really do is guess about such things. I'm not going to make a decision based on a perception of someone's profits that I have no way of confirming... that would be silly. |
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#80 | |
Bit Wrangler
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I repeat...
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![]() The rest of your comment (again) drifted into this. Talk about the business and some solutions geared toward that, because, quite honestly, no one is going to change philosophical points of view here...this is real clear to me now. My concern is solutions that put money into author's pockets. I think a growing, health eBook market that appeals to eBook *buyers* can make that happen. All other discussion is really mental to me at this point here on mobileread and I'm really not interested in discussing people's "feelings" anymore. Let's talk about the market landscape as it exists in 2007 and beyond and get guys like you paid. To me, this is worth discussion. |
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#81 | |
fruminous edugeek
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Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Northeast US
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I don't want to hijack this thread with an extended debate about poll design, but I don't think it's reasonable to disregard the results with off-hand remarks about the wording. You are, of course, free to construct your own poll (or better yet, a proper survey with a defined population and sampling strategy). Meanwhile, I stand by my original statement. I think it is quite credible to conclude that many MobileRead participants re-read books. I don't find this particularly surprising. This is a forum about reading, after all. |
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#82 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Make no mistake, it is a leap of faith that is needed here, as there are no guarantees that this will work for everybody. My method might not work for me, if I was as famous as a Crichton or Rowling, and other authors like King have tried methods that have done them more harm than good. The Baen model might be the most successful here, or maybe Harlequin is doing better, but I don't see other publishers and authors swarming into their camps. We still need a proven, documented publishing method that anyone can use to get into e-book publishing and thrive. Until we have that, Big Publishers won't be willing to risk their shirts on the vague hopes and empty promises that are represented so vocally on these threads. And they'll keep throwing their books at Amazon and locking them up at high prices. So: How do we convince publishers and authors to take that leap? And how do we convince buyers to honor it? |
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#83 | |
Bit Wrangler
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Define: "Buyers"
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The hand-wringing over "but...but...someone that didn't pay for it will HAVE IT" is so ridiculous on a practical level it is really, really laughable. It cannot be avoided. I mean JKR's books are all over the Internet. There are millions of potential editors out there perfecting any imperfections. Someone told me they saw a version of book 7 in eBook format that even had the chapter headings in the book's typeface. Bloomsbury nor JKR get a *dime*...not one penny. From a business point of view, its fairly obvious that this is a product in demand. Its is also painfully obvious to anyone that is looking that it doesn't matter if the publishers release these books. They will happen. They get no revenue. If to them, its an all or nothing proposition, then its not going to happen. The reality tho is that it doesn't really matter. Publishers really have nothing to gain by not releasing popular books as eBook...drm free or not. They happen anyway. The more valuable the "property" is (I mean brand in this instance) the more high quality the bootleg becomes, over time. The idea really should be to nip this in the bud, short-circuiting the "darknet" process. Instead, they seem to believe they will be accelerating it, when the reality of the situation clearly indicates that either way, it exists. As far as pricing goes, I think the $9.99 price point that amazon has is one that is workable...assuming publishers can add a bit more value for the money. The Amazon problem is a simple one. There is no way to read your book on anything but a kindle...not even a PC. If Amazon wants the Kindle to by the "iPod of eBooks" they would be better served by actually following Apple's model instead of the models used by all of the competitors they have laid waste to. 1. Anything you buy from Apple can be played on as many iPods as you own. 2. Any digital music you buy can be burned onto a CD which can be played on any cd player, anywhere 3. Any music that you buy that is "DRM Free" is still identified as being yours ; it is stamped with your account information 4. The system gives a feeling of actually *owning* what you buy. It does not feel "temporary" or "etherial" 5. The Price/Selection/Quality ratio makes it effectively better than "free" for those that are buyers No other digital music solution currently offers this full package of benefits. The current, and soon to be eclipsed leader in eBooks doesn't offer anywhere near the value and freedom to buyers that the iTMS does. It is neither "better than free" nor "competitive to Brick and Mortar" so there is no way they can thrive next to either. How can this be fixed? I think what people are calling "social drm" is a good step (this allows for more "playback" options and helps honest people stay that way), the $9.99 Amazon price (tho I think $7.99 would be the "killer price point"), and the addition of allowing buyers to print one copy of the book (paralleling the m4a -> cd that Apple does). How to convince publishers? Well the same thing that is enraging them should be more than enough to convince them: they don't make a dime off eBooks traded on the internet. |
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#84 |
Enthusiast
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Slovenia
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You may hate or love the pirates, the fact is that music, movies and book publishers are in competition with the pirates. It's obvious that this is not a fair competition, but let's face it, there is no other competition. If you are a sole provider of the content, you can only be in competition with your self. And this a main problem in my opinion -- why would you want to sell your materials in digital content, if you don't have to? JKR has decided not to publish her works digital, because there is no reason for her to do so (for now). So, in this sense, pirates maybe doing a general public a favour in a long turn. They are fixing a problem, albeit in the illegal way.
Where do I see the solution? Like so many others have pointed out here, the PRICE and SERVICE. When content will be so cheap and so easy available, 99% of the people will not even bother to look for the free/pirated content. The price part is all simple economics: you can sell in small volumes with high prices, or you sell cheap in high volumes, the outcome is the same, or even better for the latter. It's this point that publishers have to realize: sell a lot and cheap! Newspapers have already realized this, and are aware that they will even have to provide content for free, and make a profit in side services. So, publishers, get of your butts, and start to compete! |
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#85 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Fine, but if they believe the amount they will spend to produce an e-book line will not net them a profit, they won't bother. |
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#86 |
fruminous edugeek
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Value-add for ebooks probably deserves its own thread, but I'll offer a few suggestions:
- Excerpts from other books by the same author or publisher - Interviews with the author - Audio files of the author reading an excerpt - Scans of notes, maps, sketches, photos or other prep material the author accumulated while writing the book (this part of Rowling's website, for example, is extremely popular) - Character indices or concordances - Images of covers used in other countries or for other editions - Popup map with links on place names throughout the text that take you to the right place on the map (think Children of Hurin) - Embedded links to online book communities, with functionality possibly similar to DotReader (iLiad or Kindle could easily support this) - Discount coupons for other books by the same author or publisher Some of these features would cost the publisher more than others, but most aren't especially expensive or difficult to create. Much of this material already exists somewhere, and would just need to be located and/or converted to an appropriate format for inclusion. |
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#87 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I would like to have character names be links to where they are introduced.
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#89 | |
Bit Wrangler
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I listed some.
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Anyway, I started another thread for this ![]() |
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#90 |
Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Dec 2007
Device: Cybook
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I have only occasionally bought an e-book and I 'pirate' quite a lot of them, but then again on an avarage month I buy 20 books. Most of the time I also purchase real copies of the e-books I read. So I have to say that I don't think e-book piracy is that big of a problem. Not yet anyway, but in the future, who knows.
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