Tag Archives: EBooks

Amazon: Publishers Strong-Armed Us On E-Books

Nerval’s Lobster writes “Strengthened by an agreement with Apple that set the prices for their respective e-books higher, publishers strong-armed Amazon into giving them similar terms, an executive for the online retailer has testified in Manhattan federal court. The U.S. Department of Justice has taken Apple to court over the alleged price-fixing, after reaching out-of-court settlements with five publishers (HarperCollins Publishers LLC, Simon & Schuster, Hachette Book Group, Penguin Group, and MacMillian). Apple, which competes with Amazon in the e-book space, refused a similar settlement. “Certainly if someone offered reseller, we would have taken them up on that offer,” Russell Grandinetti, Amazon’s vice president for Kindle content, testified before the court, according to Reuters. “Reseller” means a company sells goods to a retailer for a particular price (usually wholesale), allowing the retailer to set the actual sales price. Under the terms of that model, Amazon could sell e-books for super-cheap, even if it meant going beneath the publisher’s wholesale price. Macmillan and Amazon ended up in conflict over the issue, with Amazon temporarily yanking the publisher’s e-books from its digital shelves. “We will have to capitulate and accept Macmillan’s terms because Macmillan has a monopoly over their own titles, and we will want to offer them to you even at prices we believe are needlessly high for e-books,” Amazon wrote in a statement at the time. “Amazon customers will at that point decide for themselves whether they believe it’s reasonable to pay $ 14.99 for a bestselling e-book.” But Amazon eventually relented to Macmillan’s demands, along with those of other publishers, and submitted to the agency model, in which publishers have a heavier hand in setting retail pricing.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Apple and DOJ’s e-books court battle kicks off

Both sides begin a three-week trial over whether Apple colluded with publishers to raise prices on e-books. [Read more]

    




CNET News

Stephen King shuns ebooks

Stephen King is shunning ebooks in favor of traditional print runs for his new novel, Joyland, the outspoken author has revealed, confirming he has “no plans for a digital version.” King – whose new book is released in the US from June 4, though as a printed title only – specifically retained the digital publication

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SlashGear

Ebooks represent nearly a quarter of 2012 publisher sales

The Association of American Publishers has published its 2012 revenue data, which shows that ebooks have grown steadily over the last decade and now represent nearly a quarter of US publishers’ sales at 22.55-percent. The industry saw a fairly large rise in revenue of 6-percent last year over 2011, and while the substantial number of

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SlashGear

This Is Your Brain on E-Books

When we read on dead trees, do we retain more?

I don’t have the best of memories, but ever since I was young, I prided myself on a particular talent with respect to reading. Occasionally I’d be near the end of a book, and would recall a passage near the beginning that I wanted to revisit. I wouldn’t remember the page or chapter, but almost without fail, I would recall the location on the page where the passage in question was. I knew that that wondeful description of Mr. Pumblechook appeared on the bottom half of a right-hand page, perhaps 10 lines from the bottom, and a few lines after a paragraph break.







New on MIT Technology Review

Penguin Children’s Is Turning Plants vs. Zombies Into Books, E-Books

plantsvszombiesFollowing last’s year expansion into merchandise including toys, underwear (!), and more, EA’s PopCap is now taking its popular “Plants vs. Zombies” title to the printed (and e-inked) page. Penguin Children’s has acquired the physical and e-book publishing rights to the game, in a three-year deal.

TechCrunch

WHSmith Putting DRM In EBooks Without Permission From the Authors

sgroyle(author Simon Royle) writes with an excerpt from an article he wrote about discovering that publisher WHSmith has been adding DRM to books without their authors’ permission, and against their intent: “DRM had, without my knowledge, been added to my book. I quickly checked my other books; same thing. Then I checked the books of authors who, because of their vocal and public opposition, I know are against DRM – Konrath, Howey, and Doctorow, to name a few – same result. ALL books on WHSmith have DRM in them. Rather than assume WHSmith where at fault, I checked with my distributor, Draft2Digital. They send my books to Kobo, who in turn send my books to WHSmith. D2D assured me the DRM was not being added by them and were distressed to hear that this was the case. Kobo haven’t replied to any of the messages in this thread: ‘WHSmith putting DRM in books distributed via Kobo’. I’m not holding my breath.”

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Slashdot

Macmillan tests selling e-books to libraries in two-year stretches

Macmillan tests selling ebooks to libraries in twoyear stretches

Major publishers are taking wildly different approaches to resolving the woes surrounding e-book lending at libraries: they’re experimenting with both the short-yet-cheap subscription as well as an expensive option to pay only once for perpetual use. Sure enough, we’re now seeing the middle road. Macmillan plans to run a pilot project in the first quarter of the year that will charge libraries $ 25 per copy for a selection of 1,200 back catalog Minotaur Books titles, but give buyers better than usual lending rights for either two years or 52 loans, depending on the popularity. They’ll only have permission to lend to one person at a time for each copy, although Macmillan’s comments to LibraryJournal leave the door open to changing terms should the pilot struggle to gain traction. As it stands, the strategy could be expensive for libraries if they have to pay over and over again for a perennial favorite. It might, however, be palatable for those book lending outfits already planning to go all-digital.

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Via: Ars Technica

Source: LibraryJournal

Engadget

Amazon Now Discounting HarperCollins EBooks



Nate the greatest writes “Late last week 3 publishers and the Dept of Justice finalized an agreement to settle the claims that the publishers conspired to raise ebook prices. One of the terms of the agreement was that publishers were going to have to allow ebook retailers like Amazon to set the price of ebooks. Today it looks like the new prices have gone into effect. Amazon, B&N, and a small indie ebookstore called BooksonBoard are all offering HarperCollins ebooks at a discount. B&N and Amazon seem to be using the same price book, while BoB is having a 24% off sale.”

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Slashdot

Nook Simple Touch users irate that it won’t sync their e-books

Customers took to the message boards for over two weeks to find out why the Barnes & Noble device was not syncing. According to the discussion, the e-book seller is aware of the problem.
[Read more]
CNET News

When Your e-Books Read You



theodp writes “‘Perhaps nothing will have as large an impact on advanced analytics in the coming year as the ongoing explosion of new and powerful data sources,’ writes Bill Franks in Taming The Big Data Tidal Wave. And one of the hottest new sources of Big Data, reports the WSJ’s Alexandra Alter in Your E-Book Is Reading You, is the estimated 40 million e-readers and 65 million tablets in use in the U.S. that are ripe for the picking by data scientists working for Amazon, Apple, Google, and Barnes & Noble. Some privacy watchdogs argue that e-book users should be protected from having their digital reading habits recorded. ‘There’s a societal ideal that what you read is nobody else’s business,’ says the EFF’s Cindy Cohn.”

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Slashdot

Ebooks Made of YouTube Comments Invade Amazon Kindle Store

“Alot was been hard” by Janetlw Bauie is a masterpiece of machine-generated unintentional comedy.

A pair of artist-coders have unleashed a small army of bots designed to flood the Kindle e-book store with texts comprised entirely of YouTube comments. According to the artists, even they have no idea how many books their autonomous bots are posting to the store.







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How to borrow eBooks from the library

It’s almost summertime and that means sitting by the beach or the pool with a great ebook. Did you know that you can borrow digital books from your local library and put them right on your e-reader?




FOXNews.com

An Interview With McGraw-Hill Higher Education President, Brian Kibby, About The Future Of Ebooks [TCTV]

When you run some of the biggest and best presses in town, it’s hard to imagine them ever going silent. Brian Kibby of McGraw-Hill, well known textbook publisher, would be happy to shut them down tomorrow if the need arose. He doesn’t want to pay the costs of printing, paper, and distribution. He just wants to push the ebook industry into the future.

TechCrunch

Microsoft Makes $300M Investment In New Barnes & Noble Subsidiary To Battle With Amazon And Apple In E-books

barnes_and_noble_nook_tablet_1161200_g2Barnes & Noble has found a new, major partner in its fight to get an edge over Amazon and Apple in the heating up market for e-books and the devices being used to consume them: it is teaming up with Microsoft in what the two are calling a strategic partnership, name yet to be determined. It will come in the form of a new subsidiary of B&N that will include all of its Nook business as well as its educationally-focussed College business that will see Microsoft make a $ 300 million investment in the subsidiary, valuing the company at $ 1.7 billion in exchange for around 17.6 percent equity in the subsidiary.

The news leaves the door open for B&N to eventually spin these off into a separate business altogether — or sell them to Microsoft. And it leaves a big load of questions about what B&N will do next with the Nook, which is build on a forked version of Google’s Android platform.
TechCrunch

Tor Books to drop DRM on entire catalog of e-books

A major publisher drops DRM on e-books, and some expect more companies to do the same.
[Read more]
CNET News

Shocker: People who read e-books read more

Are you ready for a bombshell? Turns out people who read e-books read more books than those don’t. That tidbit comes from the number crunchers at Pew. According to a new report titled “The Rise of E-Reading,” the e-book readers read an average of 24 books in the past year, versus the 15 books read by those who didn’t. Also, not particularly surprising is the fact that the percent of folks reading e-books is on the rise as well — the number who claimed to have read an e-book in the year prior made a bit of a jump from 17-percent in December to 21-percent in February. Naturally, the whole printed thing is still a bit more widespread, with 72-percent claiming to have read a paper-type book in the year prior, when surveyed back in December.

Shocker: People who read e-books read more originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Apr 2012 22:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Apple, publishers to settle e-books price-fixing suit: Report

Though Apple is not likely to take a major financial hit after the settlement, Amazon stands to gain upward of $ 1 billion in revenue, one analyst says.
[Read more]
CNET News

Necessary Evil? Random House Triples Prices Of Library E-Books

Amazon-Kindle1Random House, the world’s largest publisher of the kinds of books you and I read, has made some adjustments to the way it sells e-books to libraries. Notably, they have tripled the price of many titles. Librarians across the country are expressing their discontent.

The changes were telegraphed by an announcement a month ago that suggested prices would be going up soon, and most expected significant increases — but across the board popular genres and titles have gone up as much as 300%. Nothing is offered below $ 25, and some common titles are going for above $ 100.

As Kathy Petlewski, a librarian in Plymouth, puts it: “The first thing that popped into my mind was that Random House must really hate libraries.”
TechCrunch

Franzen vs. the Internet: Author says e-books damage society

The novelist Jonathan Franzen criticizes e-books, saying their readers are not “serious” and that capitalists hate paper.
CNET News

Chinese writers sue Apple for allegedly hosting pirated e-books

A group of Chinese writers has filed a lawsuit against Apple, alleging that the company's App Store sells pirated versions of the authors' works.
Computerworld News

List of free Prime eligible Kindle e-books

Having trouble finding which Kindle books you can borrow for free with a Prime membership? Here’s a helpful link.
CNET News

A New Chapter for E-Books

Lavish electronic-book projects point toward the pinnacle of the medium.

The problem with the Harry Potter series, for me and many others, was that it had to end. For fans used to midnight book-launch parties and concerts by bands with names like Draco and the ­Malfoys, the 2007 release of author J. K. Rowling’s seventh book closed out an era. But starting this past summer on Harry Potter’s birthday—July 31—­Rowling offered fans the chance to bring Harry Potter to new life by hunting the “Magical Quill” online.







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Blog – Will E-Books Destroy the Democratizing Effects of Reading?

Could Abraham Lincoln have become president of the United States in a world in which poor children lack access to physical books?







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