This Book Will Self-Destruct In 10 Hours
extrarice writes: "See here
The "rent-a-book" concept is here. Pay a buck, and you're allowed to read for a cumulative total of 10 hours. After that, the text is inaccessible (unless you somehow access the content you purchased...)"
- Don't reduce the incentive, or the desired behavior will decrease. (What you're saying.) Or:
- Increase the incentive, so the desired behavior will increase. (implied).
So let's declare all published authors and musicians exempt from taxes. That would be an increase in the incentive to produce creative works. Likewise, let's give them all free cars at taxpayer expense. If you deny these requests, it looks like you're just supporting the status quo without any real logic - how did you decide the that current level of incentive is the correct one?We need more people helping little old ladies across the street. Let's offer a million dollar reward for doing this. It will be expensive, but it complies with your logic. To turn it around, if the reward were already established policy and I advocated repealing it, you'd point out that this reduction in incentive would lead to a reduction in the desired behavior (helping little old ladies across the street).
On another note, it is the investor's job to make his investment profitable, not mine. I suggest investing in things people are willing to buy, rather than investing first and then seeking legal protection to make your investment feasible.
First, this is going the way of DivX; nobody in their right mind is going to pay to read a book for a short period. People pay for books they want to keep permanently; for temporary trial reading, they borrow books from the free public library. As far as I can tell, they've just thought of a new way to prove that e-books are not profitable.
Second, is it just me or were they extraordinarily stupid to release their timed ebook in Adobe E-book format right after Elcomsoft's Advanced E-book Processor has been heavily publicized in every geek-oriented news channel on the Internet? What are they saying here, "Crack me! Crack me!"?
Third, making available preview e-book versions of a novel is effective marketing--if it's free. Baen Books has been making the first chapters of new books available for on-line preview for quite a while now, as well as making the first books of some popular series available in their entirety for free--apparently it's been an effective enough marketing tactic that they have expanded their list of free e-books. That's right, expanded! Now, can anyone tell me how effective that would have been if they charged a $1 fee for a short reading period per book in the Baen Free Library?
Do publishers actually think when they come up with these schemes, or did the geniuses that came up with dot.bomb business plans move into publishing when I wasn't looking?
---dragoness
- Libraries are free because they are subsidized by government (usually local, sometimes state or larger).
- Libraries pretty much track everything you read, or haven't you noticed?
- Libraries are quite often subject to restrictions on what materials they can carry, based on content as well as on cost.
- Most libraries only have a few copies of each book, so in general YOU may be able to check that book out for three weeks, but not everyone can.
Don't get me wrong -- libraries are great -- but they are also a very restrictive system that allows you much less choice than you'd like as well as the security threat of the local library tracking every book you check out from them in a database. --KynnKynn's page: http://kynn.com/
So would it be illegal to write a program that, within the 10 hours, zips through the text, doing screen caps, or some other related thing, and saving it to your hard drive, so you can read it later?
I'm sure there's a more sophisticated way to get around this, but that took me all of about 2 seconds to come up with a way to defeat this.
Keep trying, copyright whores.
-J5K
The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
Maskirovka
This sounds a lot like the ill-fated Divx DVD format of two years ago. With Divx, you could buy a DVD and 'unlock' it for any 48-hour period for a few dollars.
Divx failed because it just wasn't convenient enough for the price ($100 more for a compatible DVD player, and you still had to go to a store for the discs), but this rent-a-book concept doesn't suffer the same problem if the books can simply be downloaded.
It'll be interesting to see what happens. If the rent-a-book concept succeeds, that means that renting bits (CD's? software?) might catch on again; if it fails, then don't expect to see anything else become rentable on your computer in the next few years.
It didn't take that long.
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
I'm a whore.
There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
While it would be nice to be able to get decent books at far lower then market price (average paperback going for over 6.99 nowdays). But come on, does anyone really think that the format will not be hacked/cracked within hours of it being released? Everything anyone has ever tried for something like this has been gotten around. Look at DeCSS for example, or the countless Serial # systems that software makers produce to try to prevent someone from cracking it the day it comes out. It's a good theory, but can it be done correctly?
Let me get this straight:
Yep, sounds good to me. Not! Being a Luddite, I'll do just fine reading what's already been published on paper if this actually were to take off. Unfortunately, one of the first big markets for this crap is already a captive audience: college students . If you think this topic doesn't fit into YRO, you haven't been watching the direction things are headed.
CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.
The great thing is this quote by Kurt Vonnegut
From the Los Angeles Times article on Ebooks.
General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
What if I take a photograph of each page from my monitor? This is an analong process and therefore introduces an (very small if any) amount of noise.
;-) ] can go through before it becomes unnacceptable (or even noticeable) to the consumer. Just look at how long it takes to catch the "professional" bootleggers with hundreds of VCRs in their shops. Its often months before investigations even start...
You can take your "master" 35 mm film shots, blow 'em up to 8.5x11 and photocopy in an unlimited fashion (your time, and to a certan extent, money, limit you, just as with digitally copying an ebook). With today's high speed copiers the entire city could have the book in no time. It takes quite a few generations for photocopies to be unreadable...
Besides, you'd be surprised how many generations an SVHS master [or, per a previous slashdot discussion, Betacam master
If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC