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No More D&D PDFs, Wizards of the Coast Sues 8 File Sharers

An anonymous reader writes "On April 6th, Wizards of the Coast took all of their PDF products offline, including those sold at third-party websites like RPGNow.com. From the RPGNow front page: 'Wizards of the Coast has instructed us to suspend all sales and downloads of Wizards of the Coast titles. Unfortunately, this includes offering download access to previously purchased Wizards of the Coast titles.' Wizards of the Coast also posted a press release to their website that states they are suing eight file sharers for 'copyright infringement,' and WotC_Trevor posted a short explanation about the cessation of PDF sales to the EN World Forums."

17 of 501 comments (clear)

  1. [Don't] Profit! by AKAImBatman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unfortunately, due to recent findings of illegal copying and online distribution (piracy) of our products, Wizards of the Coast has decided to cease the sales of online PDFs.

    Step 1: Point gun at foot and pull trigger.

    Wizards of the Coast has instructed us to suspend all sales and downloads of Wizards of the Coast titles. Unfortunately, this includes offering download access to previously purchased Wizards of the Coast titles.'

    Step 2: Open yourself up to lawsuits for breach of contract.

    (GMSkarka) Typical short-sighted reaction from WOTC, which makes zero sense at all, when you consider the fact that the most widely-spread pirated copies of the 4e products contain printers marks -- which means that their piracy problem pre-dated any purchases.

    Speaking as somebody whose entire income is largely dependent on my PDF sales, this really pisses me off.

    Step 3: Ignore all evidence and make assumptions in an effort to piss off both the users and the publishers.

    Step 4: Lose all profits!

    1. Re:[Don't] Profit! by Dotren · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Mod parent up... that had me cracking up

      Seriously though, is there a business conference that happens annually now where presenters try to sell the audience on the benefits of alienating your customers by providing sub-par purchasing and product use options? Do they start the whole thing off with a keynote on how to use copyright to extort and sue your customers?

      I think, in recent years, its become readily apparent that a company's true customers are it's stock holders and board members. The consumers are just raw material to be milked for money in ANY way possible.

      Sorry if that went slightly off-topic, it's just frustrating to see so many product/media providers jump on this bandwagon. Whats next? Some sort of physical DRM for printed copies?

    2. Re:[Don't] Profit! by mseeger · · Score: 5, Funny

      Typical case of "Suicide due to Fear of Death"

    3. Re:[Don't] Profit! by MeanMF · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh you can still get them..You're just no longer allowed to pay for them.

    4. Re:[Don't] Profit! by ajs · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This is their second salvo, of course. The first was when they decided to yank the rights to Dragon and Dungeon magazines from Paizo, the company that salvaged those two titles from their late-1990s slump and made them popular and useful again. Wizards is no longer the cool company that Richard Garfield and crew took from obscurity to gaming geek super-stardom. Since the Hasbro buyout, they've moved further and further into a campaign of systematically alienating and angering every one of their customers, partners, authors and fans.

      It's sad, really. There were (and probably still are) some good people there. Oh well, Steve Jackson will enjoy the business, anyway. They still have plenty of PDFs for sale, and even a few for free!

    5. Re:[Don't] Profit! by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's basically what makes me shake my head in disbelief.

      First: Those books are no longer in print and WotC is not losing a dime if they get copied. Unless, and I'd consider this highly unlikely if anything, they want to roll the printing press for those items again.

      Second: It's anything but hard to get a hand on that copy. Instead of paying WotC for it, you have to hunt for it on torrents. Yeah, you could get sued. How well that works as a deterrent is evident. Not to mention that people will have zero problem with their conscience, since they could not even buy it, even if they wanted.

      Finally, and most importantly: P&P RPG enthusiasts are, if anything, packrats. They want the printed copy if there is one available, if the book is good. I've seen books that are readily available in PDF form (from other publishers) go for three and four digit sums on ebay because they can't be bought anymore. I'm in a similar boat, I want my book in my hand (ever tried bringing a laptop to a fantasy RPG session? Talk about mood killer). I won't pay 300 bucks for it, but I'd certainly go to my shop and get it if I could! So any PDF being "ripped" is not a lost sale by any measure. It's about the best advertising you can get. Players don't read the book and then toss it away like a novel. RPG books are used more like encyclopedias, perused and consulted regularely to look up details. And gamers want that in book form. Not laptop, not a copy they tossed through their printer, they want a book!

      So where the heck is the lost sale? Where is the damage?

      Or does WotC fear that people could find out their latest edition sucks even more than the previous ones and people refuse to buy it entirely, and stick with AD&D 2nd forever?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    6. Re:[Don't] Profit! by Chyeld · · Score: 5, Informative

      Minor note: The Cyclopedia is actually not 2nd edition AD&D, it's a republishing of the alternative line they had going when AD&D came out.

      It was originally meant to be the 'intro to D&D' rules which would transition to AD&D but ended up being it's own separate line entirely. Prior to being released as the Cyclopedia, it was called the Box Sets as unlike AD&D, the Box sets were sold as paired Player and Dungeon Master guides based on level ranges.

      • Basic Set - Levels 1-3
      • Expert Set - Levels 4-14
      • Companion Set - Levels 15-25
      • Master Set - Levels 26-36 (max 'mortal' level)
      • Immortals - literally playing gods
    7. Re:[Don't] Profit! by oldspewey · · Score: 5, Funny

      This D&D guide will self destruct in 60 seconds.

      ... unless you can successfully roll for save vs. lawyers

      --
      If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
  2. Won't stop illegal downloads by furby076 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    People will just do what happened BEFORE WotC started selling their rip-off priced pdfs (pdf should not cost as much as the hard-bound book) they will scan them in and put them online.

    The moment you release your information to the public you open it up to be copied.

    BTW their 4e application (a nice piece of software) requires a subcription to update it (that is fine) my beef with it is if your computer gets reformatted you MUST resubscribe (pay money) to get a full version of it. I think that is crap. If I paid for the software to utilize and decided not to pay for my monthly subscription renewal then I should not have to pay again to reinstall the software.

    --

    I do not support "The Man". I also do not support your irrational stupidity
    1. Re:Won't stop illegal downloads by furby076 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Manufacturers can tell retailers to cease and desist from selling their products - electronic or otherwise. If they had a contract which said "Retailer is paying WoTC in advance for 100 licenses of our material for X dollars" then the retailer could say "sure we will stop selling it, but we only sold 20 so you owe us the cost of 80". Otherwise they have no recourse. Yes someone could come up with a lawsuit "I spent 40,000$ creating an ecommerce site specifically for your product which you no longer allow me to sell...you owe me money". But it all depends on the contract they signed. If WoTC had in their contract "we can tell you to stop selling our products at anytime without recourse then you must do so and you can't sue us" well it sucks for the retailer. It all depends on the contract - but to say "that is crap...." without knowing the contract is baseless.

      I love it when people scream "sue" without knowing the facts.

      --

      I do not support "The Man". I also do not support your irrational stupidity
  3. Re:D&D is dead by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 5, Funny

    Everyone should get a saving throw!

    --

    "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
  4. This will yield opposite results by Duane13 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So instead of making still LOTS of money off of legal PDF sales, now EVERYONE who wants PDFs will find them on torrents. This will make the torrenting of them more prevalent.

  5. Sword of Litigation +1 by spookymonster · · Score: 5, Funny

    WotC attacks the gazebo!

    --
    - Despite popular opinion, I am not perfect.
  6. Re:oh noes by furby076 · · Score: 5, Funny

    realizing people pirate anything not nailed down

    Great you just gave WoTC a new business model. Whenever you buy one of their books you must buy the installation package which will have a WoTC technician come out and nail the book down into your coffee/gaming table.

    --

    I do not support "The Man". I also do not support your irrational stupidity
  7. Hey Publishers! PDFs cost too much! by whistlingtony · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hey Publishers! (all of them!)

    You have a problem with piracy? Perhaps it's because all of you sell the PDF at pretty much full cost of a real book. Why do you do that?

    PDFs don't have printing costs. We know you can sell them for less.
    It's handy to reference a book while playing. It's still kind of cumbersome to reference a PDF while playing... the PDF is less valuable to us.

    If you greedy BEEP would sell good quality PDF files for say.... $3, I'd drop $100 right now. If you would make old books available, I'd drop another $100 right now.

    No Way am I paying $25 for a FILE.

    You brought it on yourselves.

    -Tony

  8. Re:D&D is dead by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd attack them with a cluewand, but it doesn't work on anyone with an int of lower than 3 or corporations.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  9. Ho-hum by Runaway1956 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't make an argument against this attitude that is anywhere near as eloquent as Eric Flint posted on Jim Baen's free library site.

    http://www.baen.com/library/

    Jim put his money where his mouth was, and GAVE AWAY book, after book, after book. More, if you happen to be disabled, you can contact Baen Books, and they will give to you NOT ONLY the books from their free library, but their mainstream books that are in print.

    Baen books had a lot of money at stake on this gamble. But, they PROVED CONCLUSIVELY that giving stuff away free MAKES MONEY for them. Every time they released a title that had been out of print, sales of that book skyrocketed.

    Over at Baen, the author has to approve his title for the free library, and some authors don't seem to use it. Those authors who have jumped aboard the free library enjoy an increase in income.

    Baen books puts the lie to all the DRM crap, and proves the corporate lackeys to be totally wrong.

    In the case of D&D stuff - if they had any brights at all, they would allow the stuff on P2P to continue, but add some cool stuff that is NOT readily downloadable via P2P. Any intelligent individual can come up with schemes for that. In fact, it would be a small step to release P2P ready material that at the very least promotes the non-P2P, and possibly even DEPENDS ON other non-P2P material.

    It constantly amazes me that lackwit idiots run the corporate world.

    Traveling salesmen and tinkers learned this lesson before electricity was discovered, for God's sake!!!

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br