EU Targets Apple In Ebook Investigation
nk497 writes "The European Commission is investigating Apple and five publishers regarding ebook pricing, after raiding ebook firms earlier this year. 'The Commission will in particular investigate whether these publishing groups and Apple have engaged in illegal agreements or practices that would have the object or the effect of restricting competition,' the watchdog said."
of course they have. What else do you call it when everybody has to sell things at the same price?
What about Amazon? Or the other big E-book retailers? How often to e-books go on sale? Discounting? Ever see an e-book for 50% off? Not very often I bet. Consider that an e-book costs mere cents to create and able to offer an unlimited supply surely they should have variable prices.
I am not mistake, son. I am disappoint. :/
Welcome to capitalism, by the way. Hope you enjoy your stay. We'll bill your credit card on departure.
The Agency Model is a racket that takes away a seller's ability to price ebooks how they see fit.
This is bad for the consumer since it means that market forces have less sway and there is little to distinguish one store from another. You will not find ebooks on sale and there is no point in "shopping around" since the price is the same everywhere.
If similar agreements were in place for other products, it would cause lawsuits. Imagine if all of the oil products sold by Shell or BP were given fixed prices. Media companies would love to have their own profit-guaranteed cartel and will push for illegal agreements to defend their aging business model.
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Maybe they didn't include Amazon and B&N because that is an european commission, and those distributors don't operate at Europe.
Rethinking email
Amazon was the one setting their own price to the books. The publishers (supported by Apple) demanded (at the time that the iPad came to the game) Amazon to only sell their books at a fixed retail price.
This is another example of why free-market is bullshit. Leave these big players uncontrolled and they will screw everybody over.
You think publishing, which relies entirely on a GOVERNMENT-GRANTED MONOPOLY to operate, is somehow an indictment of the free market?
BTW, there are about a bazillion e-books on Amazon for $0.99 if you don't want to pay $19.99 for one from a big publisher.
Ebooks are slowly changing the way authors sell their books. No longer do you need a publisher to sell you book. Self-publishing is not only a possibility now, but it is also a reality. The only thing you can get from a publisher now is up front fees and marketing. But with the web, you can do much of that yourself.
Step 1. Create a company to help authors promote books
Step 2: ????
Step 3: Profit
21st Century Renaissance Man
While B&N doesn't operate in Europe, Amazon most certainly does - in fact the Kindle is absolutely everywhere this Christmas, here in France.
VPS-like shared hosting, on under-crowded servers.
Amazon certainly does: http://www.amazon.eu/
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It seems the same thing happens with Apple hardware too. Same price everywhere.
They were involved in price fixing, which essentially is only illegal because there is government regulation. Without regulation this would happen much more often and on larger scale.
Let's try that again.
Publishers only exist because of copyright. Copyright is a government-granted monopoly.
Now explain how publishers would price-fix if copyright did not exist.
When a monopoly exists, it's usually for one of two reasons:
1. Bigger is cheaper. No smaller company can compete because the big company is more efficient and can sell their product for less than any competitor. This is good, because it means customers are paying less.
2. Government is preventing competition. This is bad, because it means customers are paying more than they should have to.
How does a big corporation become a monopoly that can charge excessively high prices without a government to keep competition out of the market?
Of course it is!
Just like healthcare in the US is heavily regulated and relies on various government monopolies (medical associations, patents...) is an indictment of the free market. It can only be solved with an even greater monopoly by making it a universal national system or a national monopoly.
You don't know anything do you? /s
That's how most companies operate (suggested retail price), however that's just the products of one company, not like the book market where there are several publishers.
Apple competes with HP and many others. Amazon suddenly can't compete with Apple, Kobo or others on books because the publishers don't want to!
This is the publishers doing, never mind Apple.
Have you not ever noticed the blurb next to the Amazon price that notes the price is set by the PUBLISHER and not Amazon? Amazon is no longer able to set their own prices, fought this, and lost the fight right after the iPad came out. The result being that blurb to let their customers know who's fucking them - apparently you've not been paying attention....
Build it, Drive it, Improve it! Hybridz.org
When I wanted to buy a book, and discovered that the hardcover was cheaper than the e-book....So I bought the hardcover.
There is no _reasonable_ explanation as to why a physical book should be cheaper than 1s and 0s.
Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
For sure! Whenever the problem is "too much government", it's always clear that the solution is "even more government". Maybe the problems of national healthcare systems could be solved by some sort of international healthcare system! If we just keep trying long enough, we'll surely elect the worlds first non-corrupt politician, and everything will be rainbows and unicorn giggles.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
All this is perfectly fine with the DoJ and the FTC as it involves a beloved US cash cow. After all, if the founder didn't have to bother with license plates on his car, why should his corporation have to bother with mere anti-trust issues?
Amazon ALLOWED?! Wow, way to rewrite history there. Amazon actually went so far as to pull Macmillan books from their store in protest but knuckled under the pressure. Their middle finger at the publishers has been to make sure anyone purchasing from them sees that the price is set by the publisher and NOT by Amazon.
Read this -> http://blog.macmillanspeaks.com/a-message-from-macmillan-ceo-john-sargent/
Amazon did NOT go quietly on this and went so far as to pull quite a few books from their digital shelves trying to NOT be forced into this but the leverage the publishers held was simply too great. This lawsuit is what should have happened all over the place right then and there, that it's only happening now years later and in the EU is a shame. Why is it that lately the EU seems to be the only place where common sense appears to be spoken?
Build it, Drive it, Improve it! Hybridz.org
Slightly OT, but as many reading this probably care about ebook prices: Try the legal search engine in the open source Calibre. Besides being arguably the best library management software available it's got a comparison search (called Get Books in the toolbar) which is the most comprehensive I've seen. It'll provide hits from a lot of different stores, but you can configure which ones. Or, if you're comfortable with liberating your legally bought books from their DRM shackles, I heard of this guy called Apprentice Alf who can help you, in which case your choice of store and DRM scheme doesn't matter all that much :)
If you're on Linux I recommend the binary install of Calibre as most distros have old-to-archaic versions in their repos.
Are you a grammar Nazi? I'm trying to improve my English; please correct my errors!
Well your second-hand experience from your mother is exactly the opposite of mine.
Over about 10 years:
I've tried Tesco and Sainsbury- I got fed up with them because they kept substituting items I didn't want for items I did. And because they expect you to hang around for 2 hour delivery slots.
I then switched to Ocado (Waitrose), who offer 1 hour delivery slots and usually arrive right at the start of the period. But after a year I stopped using them as well.
The reason: their "fresh" food onlyever has a shelf-life of a day or two. Bread, fruit, vegetables. With a few exceptions they're rotting within a couple of days of delivery.
In contrast when I go to the stores I pick the freshest -not the oldest as the delivery firms seem to do- goods and I simply avoid the food that is literally all ready rotting on the shelves (clementines and Christmas and strawberries at any time are the most likely to suffer from this).
Home delivery grocery services are still badly flawed.
Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_Book_Agreement
But how does one 'deface' an e-book? Remove the DRM?