The following Blog post talks about author's concerns, and unfortunately
someone has tricked this author saying that he is blind and needs and ebook.
David Pogue is a very popular New York Times technology columnist, and his
opinion matters for a lot of people.

 

May 22, 2008, 10:49 am 


Can e-Publishing Overcome Copyright Concerns?


Every so often, I get an e-mailed request like this:

"Dear David: I've checked the O'Reilly and Amazon sites, but I can't seem to
find electronic versions of your Missing Manual books.

"I've checked out Safari (safari.oreilly.com <http://safari.oreilly.com/> ),
where I can pay a subscription fee for unlimited monthly access to hundreds
of computer books from various publishers. But that's not practical for a
single book purchase. I also saw the single-chapter PDF purchase
option-again, not practical if you'd like the complete book.

"Sounds like a few butts might need to be kicked in the publishing world to
push them into the 21st century. Thanks in advance for your help."

With a sigh, I always reply to these queries with the same sad response:

"Unfortunately, I've had terrible experiences releasing my books in
electronic form. Twice in my career, 'blind' people e-mailed me, requesting
a PDF of one of my books. Both times, I sent one over-and both times, it was
all over the piracy sites within 48 hours, free for anyone to download.

"I've got a mortgage and three kids to put through college, and it broke my
heart! Unfortunately, the bad apples have once again spoiled it for everyone
else." 

Now, I realize that my position is unpopular in some circles. And the piracy
issue really does bum me out, because some of my how-to books (on Windows
Vista and Mac OS X, for example) are 900-page behemoths that would be so
much easier to carry, read and search right on the screen.

But this week, I came across a blog post by author Steven Poole on just this
topic. (It's at http://stevenpoole.net/blog/free-your-mind, and it contains
a couple of naughty words.) He recently conducted an experiment: he offered
an electronic download of one of his books, called "Trigger Happy," on a
"pay what you like" model. In assessing the results, he writes:

"Is this, as some people say, an exciting new Internet-age business model
for writers and other creative types?

"Er, not really. The proportion of people who left a tip after downloading
"Trigger Happy" was 1 in 1,750, or 0.057%."

Mr. Poole, as it turns out, is just as disinclined as I am to make free
electronic delivery his primary distribution channel. Here's how he covers
the "information wants to be free" line of reasoning, which he calls "the
Slashdot argument":

"It says that books, music, films, software and so on ought to be freely
distributed to anyone who wants them, simply because they can be freely
distributed.

"What is the writer or musician to do, though, if she can't earn money from
her art? Simple, says the Slashdotter: earn your money playing live (if
you're one of those musicians who plays live), or selling T-shirts or
merchandise, or providing some other kind of 'value-added' service. Many
such arguments seem to me to be simple greed disguised in high-falutin'
idealism about how 'information wants to be free.'

".I think the Slashdot argument can actually be disposed of rapidly with one
rhetorical question, as follows.

"Oh Mr. Freetard, you work as a programmer, do you? How interesting. So do
you perform all your corporate programming duties for free, and earn your
keep by selling personally branded mousemats on the side?

"Didn't think so."

But what about the Radiohead experiment, where the band released an album
online using a "pay what you like" system-and succeeded?

As Mr. Poole points out, that's fine if you're already an established name:
"If there's been a comparable success by a band that hasn't already gained
its cultural capital and name-recognition through the evils of copyright and
corporate promotion, I'd like to know about it."

So yes, this is how I, as an author who's been twice-burned, truly feel. And
yet I realize that it puts me, rather awkwardly, on the same side of the
piracy issue as the record companies and movie companies, who are suing
teenagers for downloading songs, and of whom I've made endless fun.

Actually, authors like me are lucky; our work is, at this point, pretty much
protected with unbreakable copy protection. That is, our bound and published
books can't be duplicated infinitely and distributed by the millions online.

So what would I do if I were in the business of music or movies, where
piracy is so much easier?

I'm just happy I don't have to answer that question.

.         Copyright 2009
<http://www.nytimes.com/ref/membercenter/help/copyright.html>  The New
<http://www.nytco.com/>  York Times Company 

.         Privacy <http://www.nytimes.com/privacy>  Policy 

.         NYTimes.com <http://www.nytimes.com/>  620 Eighth Avenue New York,
NY 10018 

 



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