Has anyone been following this story? I've done some reading on it, trying to get a handle at what is at play. It seems that it is just a power struggle over which distributing force gets control of pricing. The publisher or the e-retailer. The underlying theme is around e-books, Amazon obviously is no saint with its Kindle and exclusivity to only Amazon e-books. However, the big publishers are no saints either, perhaps far worse when you see how broken the publishing model is. I am actually surprised authors are so supportive of the publishers considering what % the authors get of the revenue but then again the ones who are so strongly voicing concern are the ones who don't have true financial burden and strain. They are the subscription writers who put out their two to three to ten books per year.
At the end of it, to me it feels like publishers want to control price to ensure that e-books don't dwindle their paper book sales. After all, publishers spend prospect/acquisition and marketing/advertising money and it costs a lot, they need to make sure they generate enough revenue from the successful ones to cover the expenses on the flops.
Not taking sides entirely, to me it is one coin with heads on both sides. I don't buy e-books at all and probably never will, I do buy paper and I don't want to see that jeopardized. I guess I have a vested interest in both sides. Lower prices and sustainability which side with Amazon but The continuation of paper books with stable pricing which sides with the publisher perhaps.
At the end of it, to me it feels like publishers want to control price to ensure that e-books don't dwindle their paper book sales. After all, publishers spend prospect/acquisition and marketing/advertising money and it costs a lot, they need to make sure they generate enough revenue from the successful ones to cover the expenses on the flops.
Not taking sides entirely, to me it is one coin with heads on both sides. I don't buy e-books at all and probably never will, I do buy paper and I don't want to see that jeopardized. I guess I have a vested interest in both sides. Lower prices and sustainability which side with Amazon but The continuation of paper books with stable pricing which sides with the publisher perhaps.
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