And if you want to get supertech you can probably get around this by using a 
proxy service that makes it look like you are coming from another country...
My dad used to want to watch tennis games that would air on US TV and he 
couldn't watch them from France for similar reasons. The proxy browsing fixed 
that for him no problem.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jean-Marc 
Bourguet
Sent: Monday, January 30, 2012 10:00 AM
To: feistfans-l
Subject: Re: Something about the release that bugs me.

On Mon, 30 Jan 2012 12:23:30 +0000 (GMT), Paul Atkinson 
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Couldn't have anything to do with the complexities of cross border
> trade? The tax treaties in place, and the complexity of the
> infrastructure that would involve? Partial exemption and eurostat on
> VAT? Royalties to the different publishers in different countries
> (putting aside issues over ultimate parent companies etc...) It has to
> be some big conspiracy, not just practicality? Is internet delivery
> based on the location at the time of purchase, delivery or normal
> residence of the consumer? Do people really think the barrier to entry
> for an ebusiness selling to multiple countries is just putting
> something on a server? Come on...

I'm able to buy an hardcopy books on amazon.uk (and I did that multiple times 
as well as on amazon.com; hey, I even god what I bough on amazon.com posted 
from Germany -- destination France when there is an Amazon subsidiary in 
France), not (some?) softcopy one.  The issues you highlight should not (note I 
didn't wrote "are not" -- I don't know those matter) be harder.

I've complained in the past about the same issue (for audio books, and I didn't 
step over the line as Martijn did -- I'm perhaps not fan enough --, but I 
understand quite well his frustration after having completed several times the 
whole purchase process just to be thrown out at the last step).  The 
restrictions seem artificial and I think they have their roots more in the 
distribution *contracts* than in IP, tax and custom laws.  I.E. they segmented 
the markets in such a way they left out part for which there is no buyers of 
the distribution rights.  For material things, you can find sellers able to 
dispatch to foreign addresses, for immaterial one, my guess is that the 
contracts just doesn't allow them to do it even if they wanted to do the legal 
work.
It probably made sense to tighten the contracts. Historically the difficulty of 
physical shipping probably made a clause preventing foreign redistribution 
unimportant.  Yes, people complain about inflated price (I've seen Englishmen 
complain about the more than 1£ for 1$ "exchange rate" sometimes applied) but 
nevertheless, the price of individual distribution made the alternative even 
more costly.

Yours,

--
Jean-Marc



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