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<![CDATA[ Last month's launch of
Amazon's e-book reader, Kindle, has people talking about ebooks again, with
some questioning whether or not the potential popularity of the reader combined
with the ease of viewing unauthorized ebooks on it would lead
to an increase in e-book „piracy.“ Reader Carolyn writes in to
point to a terrific rant about
how this assertion is misplaced. The writer, Kassia Krozser, notes that
it's not the Kindle's fault that people will use unauthorized content –
it's the fault of publishers for making it inconvenient for people to do what
they want with content. It's the same thing that we said when JK Rowling refused to
offer the Harry Potter books as ebooks out a fear of unauthorized copies getting
out. That's ridiculous of course. In doing so, you guarantee that the
only digital copies are unauthorized, even if someone wanted to
pay for them. It's this thinking that helped screw up the recording industry as
well. If the industry had recognized early on how Napster showed how people
wanted to consume music, they could have offered a compelling solution that
people would have paid for. Instead, they resisted and fought it, and now the
problem is much worse. The problem isn't with the device, but with publishers
not giving people the content in a format they want. As Krozser says (and we
used for the headline of this post): „Devices don't make pirates. Unreasonable
barriers make pirates.“
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