Scribd Launches a Global 'Spotify For eBooks'
Nate the greatest writes "Scribd threw its hat in the ebook subscription ring today. The site is expanding on its existing ebookstore with a new $9-a-month all-you-can-read ebook subscription service which offers a selection of ebooks from a number of publishers, including HarperCollins, E-Reads, Kensington, Red Wheel/Weiser, Rosetta Books, Sourcebooks, and Workman. That's a better selection of commercial ebooks than the Kindle owner's lending library, but not quite as broad of a selection as the recently-launched Oyster. However, Scribd is charging less and they're offering better platform support. While Oyster is only available on the iPhone, Scribd has apps for both Android and iOS, and you can read the ebooks in your web browser."
Can I or can't I read it on my e-book reader?
And what formats do they offer? If with DRM what devices support the DRM? All which support the format?
And if I want to is there a crack for removing the DRM?
The stuff that matters, things for geeks.
Which can apply to most media subscription services: What's Excluded?
I suspect that new releases wouldnt be in it, which dilutes the customer value somewhat as in the UK at least, new books start appearing in Charity shops within a few months of the release anyway, and their price for old-releases only has to compete with the negligible cost of pre-owned literature.
I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
"New e-book store / subscription service, pay^wjoin now!"
Offer me e-books like indie game bundles, pay what I want, DRM free. That will sell more content than "pay more than physical books!" .. also libraries are "for free" (though I wish they was all shut down, especially in the cases where they are robbing society for e-books.)
http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page
http://www.pgdp.net/c/
Fuck them right in the ass. We don't need another service shitting up search results with paywalled data. Experts-exchange was bad enough.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
If you rely on what's available through Project Gutenberg, you might get the mistaken impression that the world ended in the early 1920s. That's how outdated Gutenberg has to be under current law.
In my experience, each particular charity shop carries a tiny, poorly organized selection of books. This means e-books compete with online charity shops that charge shipping. Goodwill, for example, has a store on Amazon. So if e-book rental costs less than shipping, it's a win.
At least for non-fiction, books are fundamentally different than music. A book contains knowledge that you may want to retain for the rest of your life; a song is an experience that you can have a few times and move on to something else.
I'm not sure I want my books owned by a third party.
When most of the ebooks I buy are £1 or £3 (so think $1 $3 [US])
£9 a month seems like an awful lot of reading I'd have to do to make it worthwhile.
Whilst there are spurts where I read voraciously, there are also long periods where I read slowly and steadily (i.e. around one novel a month)
Having an "all you can eat" might be great if you're buying textbooks (which are shockingly expensive) or fine for super speed readers, but anyone who reads less than a couple of books a month will surely be better off paying on a per book basis?
Furthermore, the all you can eat philosophy is actually quite demeaning to authors and publishers. It suggests all books are of equal value and therefore equal merit. I'm sorry but that just isn't true. You're average Dan Brown-exactly-the-same-story-as-the-last-one, or your faux-celebrity-ghost-written-"autobiography" is not the same as you Pulitzer/Booker prize winner novel, your 100,000 epic or your highly researched non-fiction /textbook. Whilst price does NOT equal quality in a book, I would argue that some books are worth more than others.
So, all the books I want, but I have to read them on a backlit LCDscreen. No chance of settling down for a proper read on any e-ink device? What use is an e-book subscription if you can't use it on an e-book reader?
Why use such a tortured comparison? Just say "library", or if you must "digital public library".
Before committing to anything you might want to read this follow up post.Apparently there are titles shown in the library that may not actually be available in your geolocation. In addition, you won't find out about that until you actually try to open the book. It's really quite disingenuous of them to show you books and let you add them to your library, when they clearly later know that those titles are not available to you for actual reading.
'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
They offered free access to get their stock up, then started charging, even for your own content.
Please try out : https://register.blib.us for an alternative to the Netflix model for books. In this case you can own your library.
They are not charging less. Amazon Prime is $79 a year and includes the free lending option.