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Author's Guild Says Kindle's Text-To-Speech Software Illegal

Mike writes "The Author's Guild claims that the new Kindle's text-to-speech software is illegal, stating that 'They don't have the right to read a book out loud,' said Paul Aiken, executive director of the Authors Guild. 'That's an audio right, which is derivative under copyright law.' Forget for a moment that text-to-speech doesn't copy an existing work. And forget the odd notion that the artificial enunciation of plain text is equivalent to a person's nuanced and emotive reading. The Guild's claim is that even to read out loud is a production akin to an illegal copy, or a public performance."

7 of 683 comments (clear)

  1. To hell with them! by FredFredrickson · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Do you hear the sound of the words echo through your head as you read words, like me? Well, as the copyright owner of this comment, I forbid such usage- and deny you the ablity to read this comment out loud to your friends either.

    Seriously though, despite this being a rediculous idea, what is the Authors' Guild actually trying to do here?
    I mean, if anybody is really pushing to create more copyright holder rights, it's Amazon and the Kindle. Let's review...

    -The right to not let my friends borrow my book when I'm finished reading it? Check.
    -The right to not resell my book on the used books market when I'm done? Check.
    -The right to having access to my books revoked on a whim if my provider goes out of business, or *gasp* decides it's not a profitable market (MSN Music, I'm looking at you)? Check.

    With all these rights landgrabs that Amazon is making with their digital books on Amazon (and heck, digital media in general), I'd assumed they were colluding with the Author's Guild. I mean, if nobody can share your books, and nobody can help spread the buzz surrounding your great ideas or fiction... that means you'll make more sales... right?

    To hell with all of them. I'll read quietly, or out loud when ever I please. And just for being assholes, I'm going to pirate the next book published by a guild author. And I'm going to listen to Microsoft Sam read it to me. And I'm going to pretend to like it.

    --
    Belief? Hope? Preference?The Existential Vortex
    1. Re:To hell with them! by onion2k · · Score: 5, Interesting

      what is the Authors' Guild actually trying to do here?

      Make more money for the Authors' Guild. This has absolutely nothing to do with authors, writers, publishers, editors, or anyone who reads books. This is solely the money-grabbing greed of Paul Aiken and his cronies. If I were an employee of the guild I would be so ashamed of Aiken's comments I'd resign. This man, despite his apparent position representing authors, is actually against people enjoying books.

    2. Re:To hell with them! by tritonman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I can only imagine what impact this has on the world of 508 software, which is used to read stuff to the blind. I guess the author's guild don't give a rats ass about blind people.

    3. Re:To hell with them! by eln · · Score: 5, Interesting

      IANAL, but I'd imagine the purpose of the read out loud right is to protect playwrights from having people perform their plays without permission or compensation. In that context, it makes sense. In the context of a text to speech computer intended for personal use, it makes no sense.

      Sure, if someone starts hooking their Kindle up to a PA system and staging public performances of an electronic reading of someone's book, I could see an issue. However, the device itself having the ability to read text back is not in itself any kind of violation. Computers have had text to speech in some form for decades, and I'm sure they've been used to "speak" copyrighted works plenty of times in the past.

      The Author's Guild is cutting off its nose to spite its face here.

    4. Re:To hell with them! by HungryHobo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You have no idea.

      When looking for schoolbooks for the severely dyslexic little brother of a friend we tried looking for audio books. Turned out there was an organisation which used to deal with that here. Notice "was".

      For schoolbooks which had no audio book available from the publisher they'd got teachers who volunteered to record audio books for blind students.

      Guess what the publishers thought of that.

      Now they aren't allowed hand out recordings to blind students and the publishers aren't interested in making or distributing any since the market is so small.

      As far as rights holders are concerned the disabled can go fuck themselves.

  2. Hogwash by fyngyrz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sometimes I read a portion of a book out loud - to myself - in order to slow down my thought processes. It is akin, I think, to taking notes when being lectured. The act of reading out loud alters both the rate and the quality of my understanding of the text.

    Which, according to Paul Aiken, means I'm a criminal.

    Speaking as the owner of one of the oldest SF-specialized literary agencies in the country, and as someone who is quite interested in protecting author's rights for all the obvious reasons, I think Aiken has fallen off the cognitive cliff, and that he does no one - not authors, not consumers, not publishers - any favors by pushing this over-the-top interpretation of what an "audio performance" is.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  3. Right to read? by solaraddict · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is indeed the road to Tycho.