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#121 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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In terms of "orphan works," I'd consider that if has expired copyright, it should be available to the public for consumption, or at least available for public copies to be made. |
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#122 | ||
fruminous edugeek
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I'm not saying the electronic file has no value, only that an individual electronic file, if reproduced and served by a third party, has no cost to the legitimate content owner. Quote:
Books and other creative content become part of the culture they are published in, and after a period of time (and we can debate just how long that time is, but copyrights do expire), they belong to the public. So we can see that they do not continue to be commercial property, with rights bought and sold, unlike, for example, real estate, which can be passed down to heirs. Our legal system has placed creative works in an interesting, separate category from physical property (which can be bought and sold in perpetuity) and services (which are paid for once per instance). Comparisons between creative works and these other categories are limited at best. Ultimately, I think the Kindle system will only succeed so long as there is not another major platform that people want to use, i.e. Amazon achieves an effective monopoly on ebook readers and content. Otherwise, customer pressure will result in forcing Amazon to drop the restrictive DRM on content just as that pressure has forced Apple into dropping DRM on iTunes content. |
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#123 | |
Books and more books
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Location: White Plains, NY, USA
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Now I am mixed on the "right to refuse to release a book as an ebook" since I am not sure that ebooks are and should be treated differently than another format say like mmpb vs hc, and I have not heard of authors refusing to release their works only in hc, but it may also be argued that ebooks are essentially different - this is a debate we should have more btw - and of course I disagree completely with any form of drm that ensure vendor/system lock in. As long as we agree that the once a book is released for sale to the public, the public has some rights and a stake in it, I think we can continue a useful argument about this or that... |
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#124 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Obviously, it seems silly to not release your work, but for example, I'd consider it perfectly reasonable to specify that I did not want my books to be printed in a hardback format, due to environmental concerns. Or printed in 1-point type on a T-shirt. It is my choice, however stupid or ill-considered that choice may be. Quote:
This is why I suspect that an advertiser/patron model may be the best way to profit from e-books, just as television is thus supported. And if e-books are immediately released to the public someday, then print books may be the equivalent of DVDs, making additional money for the work at some point after the initial "free to receive" release. |
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#125 | |
Books and more books
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Location: White Plains, NY, USA
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For example you do not have the right to tell me to read your book only on Mondays, or I should be dressed in a blue shirt when I read it, or if it were an ebook I should read your book only on your favorite device, or... That ... is something that by and large until now has been immaterial in the Western world at least once general agreement about copyright were accepted in the 19th century. I read recently the superb Drood by D. Simmons about the last 5 year of C. Dickens life - general release Feb 09 - and one of the *funny* things there was how Mr. Dickens who was tremendously popular here in the US came for a tour and almost broke down and left booed by the public and press for insisting that he actually gets paid for his work, since US was not recognizing the rights of UK authors and the best they could do was to try and place the book with an US publishers and hope the *legitimate* edition will make some money. Of course in the case of theater it was even worse considering the considerable costs of mounting a production, so there Mr. Dickens did not even try hard sometimes.. Sure later in his life he started getting better royalties from the US due to better acceptance of copyright for foreign authors here, but then he started doing reading tours in which he made vastly more amounts of money than from selling his books - though it's true that they took a terrible toll on his health... So things change even with respect to author' rights and now I think that we are at a moment when we need to reexamine this issue and answer questions about what is legitimate, what not in ways that are acceptable to everyone |
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#126 | |
Wizard
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Location: Canada
Device: Kobo H2O / Aura HD / Glo / iPad3
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Any digital security can be broken. The goal is to make it more expensive to break the security then the rewards for breaking it. The fundamental problem with any technical solution for DRM on books is that the interface between the written words and the human has to be unencrypted so it will always be possible to exploit this interface. It's also not a lot of data and it is very easy to remove any analog noise and get a perfect digital copy. (Note: Even if someone can encrypt the neural network between the eyes and the brain you would also have to disable all motor function so the person couldn't type out what they are reading. I doubt people would accept that solution so I still maintain that it can always be exploited ![]() Consider the following as a worst case method of inefficiently exploiting this interface. You hire two people who can type at 50 words per minute at $20 per hour. Take the resultant text and compare it and manually resolve differences. If an average book is 200,000 words it's 134 hours of typing labour and 30 hours of editing. Adding $40 for the two copies of the books we're talking $3,300 maximum per book to circumvent. I'm purposely using an inefficient method that nobody would actually use. It's obviously much more rewarding to exploit the DRM directly because you only have to do that once. My point is it doesn't matter what wonderful new method of DRM technology companies come up with the unit value of the book it's protecting can't be worth more then $3.3K or someone will likely exploit it. If people are angry enough at the DRM they will volunteer their time so the $3,300 become $40. If you tell an author that "this wonderful DRM technology will protect your book from evil pirates" you should also have to tell them that their book can't be worth more then $3,300. Also note that the example works on paper books as well. Yes companies will always make promises of wonderful new DRM technologies that can't be broken because their business model is based on illusion and spreading FUD. Bruce Schneier's book "Secrets and Lies: Digital Security in a Networked World" is an excellent book on the subject. |
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#127 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Just making clear, I never said, or meant to imply, that DRM can be, or will ever be, "perfect." Just that it will probably evolve and improve over time, as long as there are companies that believe it is a useful tool.
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"Perfect DRM" is impossible... but acceptable DRM is not impossible to attain. (Hard, sure. But not impossible.) |
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#128 |
Liseuse Lover
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The whole "perfect" DRM thing was just to point out that having bits of your culture owned by corporations with the motive, intent and buying power to extent copyright laws to ensure they retain control forever is probably not a good thing.
As an aside and speaking as an engineer, I'm still a little confused on how for a given amount of digital information, 90-something% of possible arrangements of 1s and 0s are worthless noise and somehow a few % of those combinations are "magic" and worth money. Yes, I am simple that way - it must be that autistic engineering gene. Last edited by acidzebra; 09-17-2008 at 03:15 PM. |
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#129 | ||
Enthusiast
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There are some serious flaws in your above thinking. Why would you, as a content creator or owner, offer incentives to people in order to get them to use DRM'ed content but not non-DRM content? What do you stand to gain by having customers use one form rather than another? Nothing, as it happens. You stand to gain if people buy your content, irregardless of whether it comes with DRM or not. Quote:
Personally, I don't get why so few in the content-producing industries see the new possibilities as the new opportunities they are. In the 'old' days, in order to get somewhere in writing you had to get published in print. Actual physical books had to be made. No more. Some hack wrote a blog about an escort girl and there's now a tv-series based on it. What was the cost of production and publication? Nothing compared to printing books. Magnatune is a nice example of how things could be: you go to their site, check out the stuff they have, download what you like and pay as much as you like. They're still in business and have been for a while now. They don't need DRM to do what they do, so why assume that other industries do? A lot of other sites offer stuff for download too without DRM but after payment. Have they gone out of business? Not to the best of my knowledge - heck, even itunes have started doing it. Why should authors be incapable of this? Is there something intrinsic to books that necessitates DRM? I'm sorry for the rant but I really just don't get it. DRM has been around for a while and it's never worked, in any shape or form: from copyprotections on cds and software, to copy-protection on audio cds and backdoors installed on your computer, to encryption of content ... it's always been possible to get what you want without paying for it and it's never been easier. The content-industry has proven VERY willing to throw tons of money at DRM but they've so far only very reluctantly considered throwing money at their customers (in terms of cutting prices, making their products better, going for the new distribution channels, etc.). Is it THAT hard to see where the world is headed? Regards Fake |
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#130 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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By that measure, there are a number of successful DRM and DRM-type systems out there... the Kindle store... cable and satellite television... etc. Quote:
Actually, your thread indicates exactly why we're in this situation: E-books are a young commercial entity, there are a lot of methods to sell them being tried, and no one method has proven that much more effective than the others. When one selling method clearly rises to the top, and outsells the others hands-down, the entire industry will throw out everything else and go for that. until then, we have to put up with every selling trick under the sun, including DRM, and wait for the market to settle in and pick one. |
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#131 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Also, being an engineer you must know that those combinations are not "magic" but engineered. BOb |
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#132 | |
Liseuse Lover
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The hardware is a different matter, but if it would have been even remotely feasible I would have sourced it myself and stuck it together. Aside from the latter part of the post being a half-joke, the infinite monkeys with infinite typewriters joke is turned into reality with the internet and computer ubiquity. Given that most of/all of Shakespeare's work in plain text amounts to some 5 Mb or so and much less when compressed, how often do you think parts (I'm not contending the whole) of his work have been accidentally replicated in all the memory banks, TCP/IP streams, and other data transfers that ever happened between and inside computers? And then we have cases like DeCSS - the string of bits that was illegal. I don't know if that weirded you out, but I thought it completely bizarre. Last edited by acidzebra; 09-17-2008 at 05:13 PM. |
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#133 | |||
Enthusiast
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Look at the deal you're outlining above. Would you rather: a) buy exclusive content at a nice price WITH DRM, or b) buy exclusive content at a nice price WITHOUT content It's not a hard choice, is it? Quote:
Right... but "exclusive content" is in many cases enough for people to justify paying higher prices, and dealing with DRM. In the U.S., most men who hear the words "NFL Sunday Ticket" would understand what I mean. You need to argue that these people are thieves that - with no DRM applied - would otherwise steal the content. Otherwise, what's the point to DRM? Presumably, the people willing to pay for exclusive content would do so, DRM or not. Quote:
Regards Fake |
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#134 | |
Actively passive.
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I opted to forgo that ease of use, and go with an option that didn't save me any money, and caused me MORE work (Click, Buy, Download, de-DRM, fail, post, read, de-DRM again, succeed, convert, Load, Read). In terms of money, no difference, but if you believe my time has value, then I paid MORE for a book that I could have without DRM. Locking in content via DRM doesn't allow a vendor to charge premium prices. In my case, at least, my little experiment showed that I will pay (or suffer) a premium to have non-DRM content. Why? Because it's in my way, and violates what I consider a right: to be able to use, and reuse, content I've purchased. I'll also note that were I so inclined, I could give away the de-DRM'd book to anyone I wanted, so neither DRM system "protected" the content, in the end. |
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#135 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Fake and Taylor, what you're pointing out is that the "premium content" that is the usual requirement to justify a DRM-type system... isn't too premium in e-book cases, and in some cases, no premium content at all.
I don't argue the point. If these companies want to justify DRM, they have to provide premium content... and so far, they're not, by and large. That doesn't negate the point, but it clearly indicates what they are doing wrong if they plan to make DRM part of their marketing system. |
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