E-Reads™ is
...a trail-blazing reprinter of out-of-print genre and general fiction and nonfiction by leading authors. Our books are available in all e-book formats and paperback. Read the latest publishing news and provocative blogs by top commentators in the traditional and digital publishing fields.

Empress of Light
James C. Glass
In this sequel to SHANJI, Kati has used the light of creation to win a war bringing her to the throne as Empress of her planet, and she has forged new alliances with former enemies. Her daughter Yesui is born w...


Hôtel Transylvania
Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
Since 1978, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro has produced about two dozen novels and numerous short stories detailing the life of a character first introduced to the reading world as Le Comte de Saint-Germain. We first mee...

Mother's Choice
Elizabeth Mansfield
It's a Mother's Duty To Protect Her Daughter
Cassandra Beringer would never allow her daughter Cicely to repeat her mistake and marry a man twenty years her senior--even if he is the handsome Viscount Inge...


Pock's World
Dave Duncan
In this thrilling story of adventure and suspense by master storyteller Dave Duncan, five flawed individuals must decide the fate of an entire world.
On the outskirts of the Ayne Sector sits Pock’s Worl...

Time Slave
John Norman
Dr. Brenda Hamilton--a Ph.D. mathematician from Cal Tech--is beautiful, though she does not know her true beauty. She is a woman, though she does not know her true womanhood. Deep within herself she is sensu...


Sunday in Hell: Pearl Harbor Minute by Minute
Bill McWilliams
Using long established historical records and contemporary journals as well as recently-released war-time documents, Bill McWilliams has created a brand-new minute-by-minute narrative of the Day that Will ...

Lord of the Fire Lands
Dave Duncan
Raider and Wasp have spent five years at Ironhall studying to become Blades, expert swordsmen whose talents stand unmatched. Magic both enhances the Blades' fighting skills and binds them in lifelong duty....


Miscalculations
Elizabeth Mansfield
His Woman Of Affairs
Jane Douglas had a sharp wit, a brilliant mind, and an extraordinary knack for numbers. As financial advisor to Lady Martha Kettering, she was able to provide for herself, her sister ...

The Girl With the Persian Shawl
Elizabeth Mansfield
An Arrogant Spinster, a Dashing Rake, and an Unsigned Painting
The Girl With Persian Shawl was a strangely bewitching masterpiece that had hung in the Rendell household for generations. Kate Rendell graci...


A Thousand Deaths
George Alec Effinger
While George Alec Effinger’s Budayeen novel WHEN GRAVITY FAILS is perhaps his most famous work, his lesser known novel THE WOLVES OF MEMORY remained his favorite. In it, he introduced readers to Sandor Couran...
FEATURED TITLES

The Book of Kells
R.A. MacAvoy
An unusual and original work of fantasy from the acclaimed author of Tea with the Black Dragon.A contemporary man, John Thornburn (a meek, non-violent and unpredictable artist) and woman, Derval (his tough,...

After the Storm
Janet Dailey
Every novel in this collection is your passport to a romantic tour of the United States through time-honored favorites by America’s First Lady of romance fiction. Each of the fifty novels is set in a diffe...


Blood Music
Greg Bear
In the tradition of the greatest cyberpunk novels, Blood Music explores the imminent destruction of mankind and the fear of mass destruction by technological advancements. Blood Music follows present-day ev...

The Stoned Apocalypse
Marco Vassi
Marco Vassi was possibly the greatest erotic writer of his generation. His first publisher at Olympia Press, Maurice Girodias, compares his talent for prose to Henry Miller’s writing. His sexual explorat...


Stage Door Canteen
Maggie Davis
New York City, the capital of the free world, is dark, its lights turned off as enemy submarines lurk offshore, as close as Coney Island. Three men--a gunner from a B-17 bomber who‘s a national hero, a magaz...

Bran Hambric: The Farfield Curse
Kaleb Nation
What if your mother was a criminal? What if her crime was magic? What if magic ran in the family?
Bran Hambric was found alone in a locked bank vault when he was six years old. He doesn't have a clue ho...


Callie's Convict
Heidi Betts
Between Heaven and Hell lies Purgatory, Texas--a town with too few saints...and too many sinners. STEALING THE MOMENT Wade Mason had been to Hell--and escaped. Shackled in iron manacles, the fleeing inmate t...

Anvil of Stars
Greg Bear
A Ship of the Law travels the infinite enormity of space, carrying 82 young people: fighters, strategists, scientists; the Children. They work with sophisticated non-human technologies that need new thinkin...


Alone in the Ashes
William W. Johnstone
America the beautiful has gone hellishly awry. Nuclear war has descended on Main St. USA and left two things in its horrible wake: apocalyptic anarchy and Ben Raines, a lone patriot with a compulsion for ...

Cluster
Piers Anthony
The CLUSTER series of SF adventures is set in a future focused on colonization of distant planets. Sphere Sol is about 100 light years in diameter, centered on the Earth’s sun. Surrounding this sphere ...


People of the Sky
Clare Bell
Old technology survives and even thrives on the challenges of a new planet populated by ancient human spirits.
Kesbe Temiya, a freelance flyer, accepts a commission to deliver an ancient-but-restored C-47 ...

Appointment in Jerusalem
Max I. Dimont
Biblical historian Max Dimont, author of the classic JEWS, GOD, AND HISTORY, explores the mystery surrounding the predictions Jesus made about his fate. Examining the gospel, Dimont recreates the drama in thr...


Killer Knots
Nancy J. Cohen
Nancy J. Cohen's Bad Hair Day mysteries are a cut above the rest--rich, full, and stylish. Now her beautician-sleuth Marla Shore puts down her curling iron and picks up her skills at detection when she books ...

Snake Eye
William C. Dietz
FBI Special Agent Christina Rossi had it all—for a while: a loving family, a career on an upward track, the works. Then a takedown of some eco-terrorists turned unexpectedly bloody, questions are being as...


Kampus
James Gunn
The college of the future has just one purpose: endless battle. Political organizations urge ruthless combat with an invisible opponent and each student is challenged to be more extreme than the rest. One ma...
- He’s ripped off hundreds of books.
- He can rip yours off in five minutes. It’s so easy even a caveman can do it.
- He painstakingly proofreads the books he steals.
- He has ethical and moral standards. And a conscience…of sorts.
- Though piracy’s toll is in the billions of dollars, he thinks the crime is overrated.
- But he admits it’s a crime.
That’s a thumbnail profile of a book pirate. I’ve condensed it from an astounding interview with one conducted by C. Max Magee on his website “The Millions”.
After pondering the phenomenon of book piracy, a crime estimated to drain over $3 billion annually from legitimate copyright owners, Magee decided the best way to understand it was to ask a practitioner. “Who are the people downloading these books? How are they doing it and where is it happening? And, perhaps most critical for the publishing industry, why are people deciding to download books and why now? I decided to find out. After a few hours of searching – stalled by a number dead links and password protected sites – I found, on an online forum focused on sharing books via BitTorrent, someone willing to talk.”
The perpetrator’s handle is “The Real Caterpillar” and, as is so often the case, he is far from a noble Robin Hood. “He lives in the Midwest,” writes Magee, “he’s in his mid-30s and is a computer programmer by trade. By some measures, he’s the publishing industry’s ideal customer, an avid reader who buys dozens of books a year and enthusiastically recommends his favorites to friends. But he’s also uploaded hundreds of books to file sharing sites and he’s downloaded thousands.”
Here are a few revelations in his own words:
- I generally only upload content that I have scanned, with some exceptions. I have been out of the book scene for a while, concentrating on rare and out of print movies instead of books because it is much easier to rip a movie from VHS or DVD than to scan and proof a book
- I do not pretend that uploading or downloading unpurchased electronic books is morally correct, but I do think it is more of a grey area than some of your readers may
- Just because someone downloads a file, it does not mean they would have bought the product I think this is the key fact that many people in the music industry ignore – a download does not translate to a lost sale
- In truth, I think it is clear that morally, the act of pirating a product is, in fact, the moral equivalent of stealing…however, I feel the impact of e-piracy is overrated, at least in terms of ebooks
- I’ve spent anywhere from 5 to 40 hours proofing the OCR output
And, finally: “In truth, I think it is clear that morally, the act of pirating a product is, in fact, the moral equivalent of stealing… although that nagging question of what the person who has been stolen from is missing still lingers.”
Two persons mentioned by Caterpillar as having been stolen from are Mark Helprin and Harlan Ellison. Both have published privacy or anti-piracy statements on their websites. You may read Helprin’s here but it says in part: “You agree to comply with all copyright laws worldwide in your use of this site and to prevent any unauthorized copying of the materials.” Ellison’s is an all-caps fist-shaking no-prisoners Jeremiad which you may read in its entirety here. Here’s a taste:
A HOST OF SELF-SERVING INDIVIDUALS SEEM TO THINK THAT THEY CAN ALLOW THE DISSEMINATION OF WRITERS’ WORK ON THE INTERNET WITHOUT AUTHORIZATION, AND WITHOUT PAYMENT, UNDER THE BANNER OF “FAIR USE” OR THE IDIOT SLOGAN “INFORMATION MUST BE FREE.” A WRITER’S WORK IS NOT INFORMATION: IT IS OUR CREATIVE PROPERTY, OUR LIVELIHOOD AND OUR FAMILIES’ ANNUITY. WHY SHOULD ANY ARTIST, OF ANY KIND, CONTINUE CREATING NEW WORK, EKING OUT AN EXISTENCE IN PURSUIT OF A CAREER, FOLLOWING THE MUSE, WHEN LITTLE INTERNET THIEVES, RODENTS WITHOUT ETHIC OR UNDERSTANDING, STEAL AND STEAL AND STEAL, CONVENIENCING THEMSELVES AND “SCREW THE AUTHOR”? WHAT WE’RE LOOKING AT IS THE DEATH OF THE PROFESSIONAL WRITER!
Caterpillar laughs at them. “One thing that will definitely not change anyone’s mind or inspire them to stop,” he says, “are polemics from people like Mark Helprin and Harlan Ellison – attitudes like that ensure that all of their works are available online all of the time.”
For the full flavor of Magee’s interview read Confessions of a Book Pirate in its entirety here.
We are Harlan Ellison’s literary agents. Our e-book company is publisher of some thirty of his books. Though we cannot express ourselves as colorfully as he, we support his position completely. His work and property, the work and property of countless other authors, our own labor and investment and that of all legitimate, reputable publishers worldwide are being stolen. Those who file-share copyrighted books are receiving stolen property. We ask those who take and those who receive to consider whether there is any difference between having your literary property robbed and your purse stolen. For one victim’s answer, read Are Pirate-site Downloaders Better Than Muggers, Pickpockets and Shoplifters? This Victim Doesn’t Think So.
Richard Curtis
I am always interested in how people rationalize their own behavior. Piracy is hard to defend, and I will not defend it here. But as the copyright law gets wackier as Mickey Mouse gets older I do have some problems with the copyright laws. I think of Lovecraft dying alone and broke and wonder who gets to profit from his work thanks to the copyright law. I wonder about the writers whose work long out of print and forgotten because of copyright confusion. I wonder about the writers' heirs a hundred years after the writers' death who decide to keep the writers work out of print and away from the readers because of money.
Carrie Fisher has a great joke about copyright laws. Every time she looks in the mirror she has to pay George Lucas five bucks.
Hi. I am a pirate, and I have downloaded a lot of books.
I think you are missing the point. You have your morality and I have mine. It is prefectly okay for me to download books (or movies btw). It was also okay to copy or print books for everybody before 1710 (when the first copyright law was passed), or buying that "unauthorized by author" books.
Shakespeare was a pirate is he bought or copied a book (surely he did). Middle Age scribe monks were pirates. Are you really sure that your morality is better than theirs?
Probably you are thinking just now "but it is unlawful!!" Is it necessary to explain that law and moral are not the same thing? (btw it is not always unlawful).
Morality aside, it is probably of your interest to know that we the ebook pirates do buy books. I understand you are worried for your business but don't worry: the book business is not in danger.
Best regards
Your morality is the issue, not mine or some monk six centuries ago. Ultimately every time you rip off a book you're screwing the author, telling him/her that their creativity and time are worth nothing. I know people who are losing contracts, who are receiving lower advances as NY tightens their belt to deal with their costs, including revenue lost to those who steal other peoples' intellectual property.
Where it might seem you're flipping off The Man (the publishing house) ultimately the author pays the freight. The majority of us would be happy to make a living at this job, but we don't. We write because we love the story, but we also need to pay our mortgage. Why is it so hard to understand that basic equation? Book sales = food and a roof over our heads. If you like books you'll support the people who create them. If money's an issue. go the library. Show some respect for those who do this for a living. That's all we ask.
People steal books/music/dvds because they can. If the doors to Best Buy were thrown open and a sign posted that there will be no enforcement for theft, some people would steal things and others would not. Eventually, no matter how many people didn't steal, the store would be empty. (Unless anyone thinks Best Buy would continue stocking the shelves.) Until there's enforcement action by the govt., the problem will continue, and probably grow.
As for "your morality" vs. mine, we all live under the same laws. I don't like all the laws either (paying the IRS comes to mind), but I still obey them. That's how we can all live in a civilized society.
@Jana:
So it is good I go to the library, but it is bad I download the book.
I clearly said we (the pirates) do buy books. Money is not an issue.
@Carly:
There is a difference between stealing and downloading. If I steal a printed book al Best Buy, Best Buy becomes poorer. If I download a Dan Brown's book, Dan Brown does not become poorer. That's why your economical analysis is wrong. Shakespeare did make a living with his books.
Who is one of the most pirated authors? Dan Brown. But he is not one of the poorest.
Part of my money went to Dan Brown's pockets. If you are interested in business, instead of your morality, the cuestion is why many people go to library, and download books AND buy books. For centuries books have been bought by the very same people that go to libraries.
I am curious, Jap, you are aware writers make money when people buy their book from a bookstore or a website? How is not paying for a book in a Barnes & Noble bookstore wrong but not paying for a book at Barnes & Noble website ok?
Also I am curious Michael. How is not paying for a book in a library wrong? How is downloading for free a 1922 book (public domain) right but a 1923 book wrong?
Until 1978 copyright term was a maximum of 56 years since the work was first published. Nowadays is 70 years since author's death. If I download a 1950 book, is that wrong or right?
The above terms are for United States. If I live in a country where a 1989 book is in public domain, is it wrong to download it?
Morality? Copyright is (sometimes) useful, not moral.
Btw I prefer to buy O'Reilly ebooks, they are not DRM'd.
"Just because someone downloads a file, it does not mean they would have bought the product. I think this is the key fact that many people in the music industry ignore – a download does not translate to a lost sale.
In truth, I think it is clear that morally, the act of pirating a product is, in fact, the moral equivalent of stealing…however, I feel the impact of e-piracy is overrated, at least in terms of ebooks."
Even as an aspiring writer, I have to agree with this part of what the "pirate" said. It's not a one-to-one ratio in terms of loss. More than likely, in a world without pirating, a majority of people would just not buy the book. So yeah, I definitely think the impact is overrated (or over-agonized about). I mean, the music industry has changed since songs became easily pirated, but it hasn't collapsed.
That said, pirating books is not the same as taking them out from the library. Because the library does pay for its books, and it tracks checkouts and other stats that are valuable to the author/publisher. So that's not really a fair justification of piracy.
"Why is it so hard to understand that basic equation? Book sales = food and a roof over our heads".
@ Jana Oliver: I am against piracy, but it is important to have in mind that the equation "illicit download = lost sale" is NOT true.
@Carontestyx – I know it's not a one on one trade off, that not every book pirated would have cost a sale. But the pirate took time to download and read the book. If he/she is experiencing the fruit of the author's efforts, shouldn't the author be compensated for their work?
@jap – parsing copyright dates isn't the issue. Neither is your claim that Dan Brown didn't lose money because he's a bestselling author. He's entitled to every single dollar he earns. For every Dan B. there are hundreds, if not thousands of authors who are struggling to pay their bills. Case in point – a single mom working a day job and then writing until midnight every night, seven days a week, to keep a roof over her head. Every illegal download dilutes her chances of making that happen. There are real world consequences to piracy and I see them every day.
I've just got to ask — if you can afford to buy books, then why don't you?
@Jana
Any contradiction of your moral system is the issue. Your sense of morality is contradictory, must I accept it?
I have never read most of the books I have downloaded. One of the downloads was a file containing several thousands of books. I have also bought several of the books I previously downloaded and read. Other books I did read I would never buy them. There are also books that I did read and I will buy as soon as I find them in a bookstore. I have also bougth books that I know they are far easy to find and download. In fact buying books is a great pleasure for me.
Why do many people pirate? I think the answer is different for each person. In my case, I think and I feel that that Internet is a great tool to get books, tons of books, It is the greatest library and the greatest bookstore at same time.
Btw DRM is a Bad Idea. It decreases sales, and believe me, it has never stopped pirates.
How did I read this article? It is not because it is an article about piracy, but because it is an article of this blog, and I usually read this blog because it is a good blog about books world.
Look, just like music and movies, most people who pirate aren't doing it because they get their jollies "stealing", they do it because they want to watch or listen to something on demand – they want it right now. The don't care about the cover art or special features. They just want to watch the damn movie, listen to the song, or read the novel, now.
In the analog days of old, that attitude was ridiculous, immature and impossible. But explain to them how something whose very orgins are digital is: not available, twice the price of a hardcopy, ( something that takes up actual realestate and tangible resources), or comes with crazy restrictions,( DRM, cross-platform issues, etc…).
You're peeing on their leg. It's digital – it's out there already, they want it. If they can't buy it easily, they'll take two seconds and download it. Wait… for what?
In the next couple of years, subscription services should become the norm, Hulu, Netflix, Pandora and others will probably be fee based, on-demand material. And why not a subscription service for books? I would gladly pay $$/month to be able to "borrow" a digital book on demand. If I really like it, I can always kill a tree and buy a hardcopy.
Old, gray-haired publishing execs are getting in the way- the game has changed, get out of your uniforms and hit the showers.
I totally agree that publishers should make it as easy as possible for a consumer to purchase a book, print or otherwise. and at a fair price to all involved. Preferably minus all the egregious digital platform issues. Amazon (and others) have made it (somewhat) easier. Still there are folks who insist on scanning books and uploading them though they can buy an e-book at a decent price from Fictionwise (etc.) with little effort. Some folks are just going to steal no matter how easy you make it. What I'm trying to do is to show the consequences to the creator when that happens.
You have me intrigued, Jap. I would suggest you are not a typical pirate because you're not uploading content or selling it on eBay. We'll just have to agree to disagree on the morality issue.
Frankly, I've enjoyed this conversation.
@Jana
AFAIK I am a typical pirate. Most pirates never upload works, neither sell them, just download. Also most pirates buy content in a way or other. I for instance download movies but go to movie theatres.
In fact many pirates are high spending people. And many music pirates are buying CDs, the real problem of CD market is that CD is becoming obsolete. Digital sales (iTunes and alikes) are speedly increasing. Hulu is not yet available in my country but I am willing to try it as soon as possible,
Do you really think a guy who is scanning a book and uploading it is trying to avoid buying it al Fictionwise? That's a nonsense.
I have also enjoyed this conversation. And don't worry, business is not in danger altough it does need to evolve.
jap
I wonder if you would like to write a more formal article or series of articles for E-Reads amplifying on your motives, experience, and especially what you believe authors and publishers should be doing to protect their copyright. Though we deplore media pirates we think there might be benefit for the author and publishing community in confronting them.
You may email me confidentially at info@reads.com
@Richard
I am not interested in writing an article but if you want to ask or to talk about it here, I will be pleased to talk with you.
It is not possible to protect copyright. You can fight for-profit piracy because you can always follow the money and because any seller (lawful or not) needs to offer his product to public. You can not successfully fight not-for-profit piracy because it is possible to do it so privately as desired. 10 years of RIAA prosecution did get nothing.
However may be I can be useful for your business. I am not just a pirate, I am also a customer. Sometimes I pirate books, sometimes I buy them. Obviously, if you get to maximize the times I buy then you are increasing your sales.
As I said DRM is a Bad Idea. When people buy ebooks, they want to do things like read that book on any present and future device. So many people break the DRM (it is easy) but breaking the DRM is unlawful, so your customers have paid to be outlaws. This is not the kind of thing that discourage piracy.
Everytime I have bought a DRMed book I broke the DRM for the above reason and I did feel fooled because I paid but I was out of law. Just imagine which is the effect on your law abiding customers. They get a product that is worse than what I get when I pirate. Do you want to reduce piracy? Sell your books sans DRM.
My best hint for you: don't obsess with piracy, focus on selling.
Jap,
Your remark about William Shakespeare interested me.
"That's why your economical analysis is wrong. Shakespeare did make a living with his books."
Shakespeare did not write books. He turned popular stories into plays which were written down as Folios. However, although collections were taken during performances, Shakespeare's income was derived from the patronage of Queen Elizabeth.
The result was that many of Shakespeare's plays were propaganda to please the Queen (and to defame her enemies). It worked very well.
I doubt that the patronage business model would work today.
This is a fascinating discussion. I have long struggled with book buying because I only want to buy books to keep and re-read. How can I know which are worth investing my money?
Sometimes I wait till the library has it, unless I’m confident of the author. Sometimes I sit reading in the bookstore for hours. Sometimes I read through as many blogs about the story as I can find. Sometimes I just go to second-hand stores where the books are cheaper and I won’t lose as much out of pocket. But when I find a good book, I buy it, and I don’t mind spending $30 for the hardcover either.
In the end, most purchases are a gamble, and while the odds of winning are greater than in Vegas, I really hate losing money when I could have spent it on a better story, and one I could treasure for years.
E-books are a convenience. I would love to find a CD or a code in the back of my purchases, containing the right to read the book in whatever form suits me. But when it comes down to it, I want to have the paper rendition of my treasures, just in case the media changes too much.
I guess those who truly love books (and there are many of us out there) see that having free access to a truly good story isn’t going to prevent us from purchasing the hard-copy. It’s like a sampler, or a wine tasting. Once we find what we like, we buy a case of it. I would gladly pay for access to an online library of a publisher’s offerings just to have the chance to buy books with confidence that I will re-read and treasure them.
Seeing readers as investors and fine-art collectors would change the market, and perhaps more than anyone might desire. I’m certainly not able to trace all the possible effects. But I think publishers should trust consumers who love books, treating them like the treasures they are. We will let them know when something is worth re-printing by pursuing the hard-copy even if we’ve already read it online. I’m often frustrated to find that a story I love isn’t even available in a quality edition, but only on trash paper and poorly glued binding! *rolls eyes*
The reason I spend money on junk books is because I want to find the good books. I often return books because the story isn’t one I want to keep, or satisfy myself with the paperback because I’ve already spent the money, even though I would have bought the hardcover had I known it would be good.
Do I read pirated books? Not on purpose. I search the internet for stories to read online and, when I download, I try to make it the freebies from publisher’s sites or purchases from the reputable companies. But I still wish I could try those authors I think I would like. I would buy a lot more books if I were confident of the ideas within the pages, and in hardcover. Because that is the sort of library I want to own, shelves of books that I could recommend without hesitation and re-read repeatedly because they are meaningful to me.
Right now, it’s too much of a gamble. I don’t buy books from new authors very often because of this, even though the chance of supporting an author whose writing is well worth it glimmers like gold upon a storm-washed beach.
Hi. I found this discussion rather interesting. I buy a lot of books, both print and as ebooks.
I attempt to only buy ebooks without DRM and not for a specific platform, because I think that the trend to make specific ebook readers which use a propitiatory format is both foolish and dangerous. It is foolish in the sense that Jay referred to above because some people have an urge to prove encryption is breakable- and any encryption is a challenge. This encourages people to take the challenge. It is also foolish because I know writers who have had ebooks made of their titles, and the company has gone out of business- and the ebooks are not available, but their ebook rights are up in the air. The people who bought those ebooks have no support for any problems they have reading them on that reader.
It is dangerous because it allows the owners of the proprietary format to use that as a tool to gain power- as is seen in the recent disturbing antics with Amazon.com. It allows for a disturbing amount of censorship, if you have the only reader that can read certain books, and you can remove books people have bought. The fact that Apple and Amazon are flexing their ebook ‘muscles’ is more than obnoxious. It seems to me that it can ever so easily become a monopoly on distribution. It is also a flagrant disregard of the rights of people and publishers to set their own prices.
Now to the ambivalent portion. I have downloaded books that I did not pay for. Some of these came from Baen and Tor, and Cory Doctorow, and various sites that occasionally put up free ebooks. I read Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother as a free ebook, and decided that I wanted to have it in hardcover, when I usually wait for paperback, and that I wanted to send a copy to a friend as a hardcover too.
However, I have also downloaded books that were not from sites giving them out legally. My gray position is that I download books I already own – and want to be able to read in ebook form – on a net book currently – for portability. This seems the equivalent of ripping a CD to an Mp3 file and playing it on my computer. I realize that publishers would rather I buy books in every different format to use. But I did buy that book originally, doing my part in giving money to the writer and paying the publisher for their services. Ethically, I think this is gray.
What is not gray is when I have downloaded a book I did not purchase, and read it. I don’t do this a lot, but I have done it. I will read a book by an author I am not familiar with, to find out if I like their writing.
There are several people whose books I read in pirated ebook form for the first time and then went out and purchased print copies of every one of their books I could find. This includes buying OP copies from used book dealers- which is also a practice that does not give money to publishers or writers a second time.
There are writers whose books I stopped reading after a few pages, and deleted the books, because I knew I was not interested. While an act of piracy, because I downloaded the book, this is no different in results than browsing the shelves of a print book store and then not buying the book because it did not interest me. Now that more print book buying is done over the Internet, it is often impossible to browse a book before the commitment to buy it. The page or two sometimes available online at sites like Amazon is not adequate, unless the book is really awful- and even then I can not page to the center and see if the writing has improved or a plot has appeared. If publishers would post a chapter or selections from every book on their entire list on their website, I would haunt the sites. It also might sell a great many more mid list books, just because people could become aware of them, which would benefit everyone. Until then, browsing writers’ works in a download to find people I have never read before is sometimes only possible in a pirate download.
I have also downloaded a book which has still technically been in copyright, because there was no available copy to buy, as the book had gone out of print. Again, this is something that happens to many many mid list books, and having ebook copies available to buy- for a reasonable price (another issue entirely) might bring many more sales for the book, instead of it disappearing into oblivion.
Where I feel guilty is when I download a copy of a book that was recently released, because I cannot afford to buy it in hardcover, and don’t want to wait for a paperback edition. Since I have not already purchased it, even though I intend to, it is a true act of piracy- and I do try to restrain myself. Publishers like Baen Books, who sell their new releases for the month whether they are hardcover or paper, for a flat fee in ebook form, mean I do not have to resort to that. Their bundle for the month for a webscription is $15- the price or less for two paperbacks, and I can legally feed my habit.
While there are always going to be people who pirate things for the sake of getting something they did not have to pay for, I think there are many more people like me- who would happily purchase ebooks at reasonable prices, and only resort to other behaviors when this is not possible.
Publishing is in a state of flux. Making sensible decisions about ebooks, and taking advantage of their flexibility is a step that publishers need to take. The hard work was creating a book for sale as a print copy. Pirated books are often as good quality as any print or ebook copy available, with some uploaders adding in pictures from the text. Even books no longer in print- the mid list- still are available as a hard copy somewhere- even if only on the writer’s bookshelf. Scanning it into ebook format is simple enough for high school students. It could put a lot more money into the pocket of writers and publishers to make those books available in non-pirated format, and it would not be filling warehouses, or messing up royalty statements and accounting with returned covers.
I think that many people – me included – would rather pay a reasonable fee for a previously unavailable older book than look for a bootleg copy.
@Ambivalent
Thanks for this very cogent and candid statement. I think it’s worth airing on the home page of our website blog, so look for it presently.
RC
When someone has the right to sue you, it’s the law that matters–not what you feel ethically is OK. When you pirate, you risk getting sued by the copyright holder. If you are sued and you lose, you take the consequences–you may well end up paying tens of thousands more in damages and legal fees than you’d have paid for a legitimately bought book.
Therefore endless gyrations and arguments regarding what you personally morally feel is OK are pointless.
Thanks. I am pleased that you think my view worth additional discussion.
ebooks are of great interest for me- I own several thousand printed books, and many of them are not easily accessible. Being able to reread books, and get new ones without straining my walls any further is a necessary option.
I wanted to also give you a piece of information I learned recently; there is a new document scanner which makes it incredibly fast for books to get into computerized format. http://cli.gs/QyWuQz
With a tool like this, publishers have a means of getting non computerized material onto a computer to format into an ebook quickly and easily. It is not a tool for pirates. I do not imagine it will be a cheap machine, but it is a way publishers can make a previously labor intensive activity much more feasible.
I think it also means that the books Google scanned – in a manner which is perilously close to piracy as well- need not be the only way for people to get copyrighted ebooks, if publishers can easily have their own version to offer with the consent of the writer.