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Sci-Fi Publisher Tor Ditches DRM For E-Books

First time accepted submitter FBeans writes "'Science fiction publisher Tor UK is dropping digital rights management from its e-books alongside a similar move by its U.S. partners. ... Tor UK, Tor Books and Forge are divisions of Pan Macmillan, which said it viewed the move as an "experiment."' With experiments, come results. Now users can finally read their books across multiple devices such as Amazon's Kindle, Sony Reader, Kobo eReader and Apple's iBooks. Perhaps we will see the *increase* of sales, because the new unrestricted format outweighs the decrease caused by piracy?"

1 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Re:About Time by elsurexiste · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The implication being that DRM somehow encumbers piracy. The simple fact is it is completely ineffectual at slowing piracy down.

    That's actually wrong. It indeed slows initial piracy spreading. Numbers, sadly, are in the industry and not in academia.

    You can find pirated copies of every piece of music, video, and publication you want despite the draconian DRM that is so prevalent in the industry.

    That's a popular confusion about the purpose of DRM schemes. Here's the real deal: the purpose is to slow down initial piracy enough to make a profit from people who would choose the pirated, free version if they can find it. People willing to pay only $0 will pay exactly that. Fans will pay you nicely regardless of DRM. The group that DRM targets is the big crowd that can pay your price, but won't give you a dime if they can get it for free.

    I recall the people behind "The Witcher" put DRM on their files and removed it after the product was delivered. Other people won't bother, but they can do it with exactly the same results in their profits. Because, indeed, DRM is not a piracy-stopper but an initial-piracy-slower.

    --
    I rarely respond to comments. Also, don't ask for clarifications: a brain and Google are faster, believe me!