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Japanese Publishers Lash Out At Amazon's Policies

Nate the greatest writes: Amazon is in a bitter contract fight with Hachette in the U.S. and Bonnier in Germany, and now it seems the retail giant is also in conflict with publishers in Japan. Amazon has launched a new rating system in Japan which gives preference to publishers with larger ebook catalogs (and publishers that pay higher fees), leading to complaints that Amazon is using its market power to blackmail publishers. Where have we heard that complaint before?

The retailer is also being boycotted by a handful of Japanese publishers who disagree with Amazon offering a rewards program to students. The retailer gives students 10% of a book's price as points, which can be used to buy more books. This skirts Japanese fixed-price book laws, so several smaller publishers pulled their books from Amazon in protest. Businesses are out to make money and not friends, but Amazon sure is a lightning rod for conflicts, isn't it?

8 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. First sale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Once you sell something to me, it's none of your business if I choose to re-sell it. In particular, the price I charge is none of you business.

    1. Re:First sale by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Informative

      Once you sell something to me, it's none of your business if I choose to re-sell it. In particular, the price I charge is none of you business.

      First Sale Doctrine is American law, not Japanese. Book publishing in Japan is a cozy protected racket. Even magazines can cost the equivalent of $10-15 per issue. Amazon is going against deeply entrenched special interests. I wish them luck, but it will not be easy.

  2. Businesses are out to make money and not friends by bmo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Halve your margin and triple your sales.

    >NO BREAKS TO ANYBODY, ESPECIALLY STUDENTS

    It's like they're begging for piracy to happen.

    --
    BMO

  3. Amazon riding rough over industry? One recourse. by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Time to sue Apple again and make sure there is zero viable competition remaining for eBooks. Make that rubble bounce.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  4. Re:Amazon riding rough over industry? One recourse by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Apple was only ever competing in the eBook industry on their own devices - and they were hurting the rest of us reading eBooks on other platforms.

    When I can read my Apple eBooks on anything other than an IOS device, then they are in competition, until then they are just a negative on the industry as they are treating IOS as the entire market when dealing with publishers, which affects me over here on a platform Apple will never touch.

  5. Re:Simple. Easy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Those got driven out of America by big chains 30 years ago. Frankly, I don't enjoy books enough to ever want to deal with a B&M store as mostly what I am buying is technical books, I'd much rather have reviews from people in the field rather then some local bookstore proprietor taking a markup for friendly service. I'd much rather deal with amazon and I'm fine with them putting the screws to the middlemen in that industry after dealing with textbooks, karma is a bitch publishers.

  6. Re:The world's most protectionist economy by fullback · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sorry, but it is not "patriotic duty." I've lived in Japan for over 20 years and most markets are not locked up. There is a sense of community in Japan. Patriotism is not teary-eyed nonsense looking at a colored cloth. It's a sense of living within a society and doing things that benefit a society that's been around for over 1,200 years.

    Japan is small, has no resources, half the population of the US packed into a place the size of California. Police don't kill people and a convenience store robbery (no one gets hurt) is national news.

    The used book business in Japan is huge. People read in Japan; they like books and magazines. They like the touch of paper. It's the most widely read population in the world. People stand at bookstores and read and read and read. The pricing model assures that small publishers exist and a wide variety of books and authors can be published. They are not all gobbled up by conglomerates.

    Japan can do business in Japan however it chooses.

  7. a physical delight by Anomalyst · · Score: 3, Insightful

    a physical delight to go, in persona, to a book store, browse

    Unless you encounter bookshelves where the fantasy and vampire stories are mixed with the science fiction. I get the urge to go mix the romance shelves with the mysteries in retaliation

    --
    There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.