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Reader Voices: E-books and Publisher Paranoia

By Ed Foster, Section The Gripelog
Posted on Tue Mar 16, 2004 at 02:12:10 PM PDT
Are book publishers shooting themselves in the foot by insisting on draconian rights management for their e-books? Many readers responded to my recent column on the subject that they think that’s the case, but one reader had some inside knowledge as to how the situation came about.


"I can testify that the fault lies squarely with the book publishers, not platform vendors like Adobe, Microsoft, etc.," wrote the reader, a CTO who helped launch the e-book business of a major online retailer several years ago. "Publishers are irrationally paranoid about ‘illegal’ use of their content. But the truth is one of the former platform vendors does carry some responsibility for fanning the flames.

"Gemstar, which used to be a player in the e-book space with their Softbook and Rocketbook reading devices, always touted the fact that their platform had a major advantage over Palm, Adobe, MS, etc," the reader continued. "This was because only they had a hardware platform, whose DRM was ‘impossible’ to break (turned out not to be true, in any case). Gemstar spent a lot of time trying to scare the publishers away from the Palm, Adobe, MS, software-based readers, claiming that the content would soon be public domain.

"I remember trying to convince publishers how irrational the fears were," the reader continued, "considering the fact that anyone with a $99 scanner, the ‘lite’ version of an OCR package bundled with it, and a little knowledge, could produce a credible e-book in a couple of hours. Why would a budding pirate bother to try to break DRM? No chain is stronger than its weakest link. So why waste all that money and effort -- and antagonize customers -- with draconian DRM schemes? But the publishers preferred the Gemstar argument, and the result is the kind of DRM problems you wrote about. The irony, of course, is that both Gemstar e-book platforms were market failures and Gemstar is now out of the e-book business entirely."

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Reader Voices: E-books and Publisher Paranoia | 3 comments (3 topical) | Post A Comment
Shooting themselves in the foot....[ Reply to This ] (none / 0) (#1)
by Mason on Tue Mar 16, 2004 at 02:35:16 PM PDT

As far as I'm concerned, that'd be a yes.  There are too many competing formats, restrictions, platform issues, etc, and they've just turned me off altogether.  I buy a lot of technical books, and would be happy to spend a few bucks for an e-book format if I could read them where I wanted, when I wanted, without having to jump through a lot of hoops.  Until that happens, paper works just fine -- and I can resell or give them away without any hassle, either!

[ Reply to This ]


Palm Digital Media[ Reply to This ] (none / 0) (#2)
by Anonymous User on Thu Mar 18, 2004 at 08:10:40 AM PDT

I don't know about the other e-book formats, having never tried them, but I do like the Palm Digital Media (formerly Peanut Press) e-books. Their e-book files can be freely copied from device to device (they are not locked to a specific hardware device), and are readable on a variety of platforms (currently Palm OS, PocketPC, Windows, and Mac). They have a large selection of books as well -- the only ones I wanted that they don't yet have are the Harry Potter series (I imagine the J.K. Rowling cash machine is quite paranoid about e-books and piracy). http://www.palmdigitalmedia.com/

[ Reply to This ]


Dedicated E-Book Readers: Bad Idea[ Reply to This ] (none / 0) (#3)
by Anonymous User on Thu Mar 18, 2004 at 02:17:13 PM PDT

The whole idea of a dedicated e-book reader didn't make any sense. These were people that didn't understand what they were dealing with in the first place. E-BOOKS AREN'T BOOKS. The advantage of e-books is flexibility - different display possibilities, moving between machines, searching, etc. A dedicated e-book reader is relatively expensive, with a poor display (compared to a book), has limited run time or must be run off a wire, and can be easily damaged. Any proprietary e-books purchased for the device will almost certainly be useless if the company goes out of business or you don't buy a replacement reader when the first one dies. The only possible advantage would be if large numbers of e-books were sold for substantially less than regular books. And that didn't happen. E-books are usually sold for a premium, at hard-bound prices or more. These guys just weren't going to get it until they lost their investment. Too bad.

[ Reply to This ]


Reader Voices: E-books and Publisher Paranoia | 3 comments (3 topical) | Post A Comment
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