For sure. Libraries are the thin line between civilization and barbarity, paraphrase @neilhimself . Hey, @DrunkestLibrary , how are authors supported by libraries? My research gets mixed results. I will buy a series after checking the first book out.
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Replying to @soc_lee @neilhimself
That is a good question. I admit I am curious as well.
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The issue is that the price of buying a physical book to lend in circulation and the price of an ebook lending license are different - the latter is much higher - because an ebook can be lent many more times to many more people than one physical book and depresses sales more
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Replying to @arthur_affect @downix and
Especially since, no matter what restrictions you slap on ebook lending, it's much easier for an ordinary person with a computer to crack your DRM and rip the file than it is to physically scan a physical book, so the piracy risk is higher
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Replying to @arthur_affect @downix and
It may seem like an arbitrary distinction to you but arguing that restrictive terms on ebook lending means you don't want libraries to exist at all because ebooks and physical books are "the same thing" is disingenuous as hell
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Replying to @arthur_affect @downix and
It's like saying that because a studio was willing to broadcast a TV show over the air "for free" they should be fine with recording the episode and throwing it up on YouTube for no additional money because it's "the same thing"
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I understand you're upset, bro, but I'm not the one saying you shouldn't get paid. I literally just asked what libraries do for authors.
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Okay, and the answer is that libraries traditionally buy one physical copy of a book for every copy they have in circulation, so authors get paid in proportion to how much "bandwidth" their "file" uses on the physical shelves
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Replying to @arthur_affect @soc_lee and
Publishers negotiate licenses for ebooks based on how much more they think ebooks being available for free will cut into sales than physical lending, and scale their fees based on how many copies the library will allow to be "borrowed" at once
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Right. So by this position, the libraries should be able to lend out these ebooks, up to the volume licensed, through their back end provider, whomever they are.
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Yes, WITH THE CONSENT OF THE RIGHTSHOLDER, UNDER TERMS THEY NEGOTIATED The "controlled digital lending" theory (CDL) of the Internet Archive asserts they don't have to do this, that whoever owns a physical copy can do whatever they want with it "within reason"
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And I am with you here.
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Okay, so you agree with the Authors Guild that the Internet Archive should take down all their CDL content immediately (the "extreme" position) and only put up ebooks under a "traditional" license
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