Showing posts with label amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amazon. Show all posts

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Stross on ebooks

Disclaimer: Since 2006 I have been employed by Google, which sells ebooks and related technology, and therefore competes with several of the companies involved in the subject matter. My opinions are my own and not those of my employer.

Charlie Stross has a compelling analysis of the book publishers' position, in light of the recently opened Department of Justice lawsuit against Apple for alleged price fixing. (Incidentally Stross's comments are usually decent and he engages with his readers as well, so they're worth a skim.)

Stross's post reminds me a lot of something I wrote about 2 years ago. Rereading that post today, I find that I have very little to add to it.

There is one additional thing from Stross's post, though, that I find particularly galling:

. . . if your boss is a 70 year old billionaire who also owns a movie studio and listens to the MPAA, you don't get a vote. Speaking out against DRM was, as more than one editor told me over the past decade, potentially a career-limiting move.

Publishing companies like to portray themselves as scrappy underdogs locked in heroic battle on the side of knowledge against the forces of ignorance. In fact, they are merely subordinate tentacles of large, stupid media conglomerates; they aid the forces of knowledge when it is convenient for business, and do whatever they can to muzzle open discourse when that is convenient. (Fortunately their power to silence critics is fairly limited in a free society.) Critics have been repeating for years that ebooks should be convenient and DRM-free. Publishers never listened; instead they threatened the careers of people like Stross's editors for even bringing it up.

Anyway, I can't comment on the substance of the DoJ lawsuit (and anyway, I know nothing about the facts of the case, so my comments would be pointless), but I find it hard to muster much sympathy for these people. The solution to their problems has been staring them in the face for as long as ebooks have existed. Unfortunately, I'm somewhat less sanguine than Stross that publishers are going to learn the lesson. They seem pretty impervious to persuasion.


p.s. See also Tim O'Reilly's Plus post.

Monday, January 03, 2011

The types of bestselling free Kindle books

Periodically I go on binges where I browse the Kindle bestsellers list and download most of the top 100 free books, more or less indiscriminately, without consideration for quality. I mean, what the hell, it's free and my Kindle 2 still has over 1.2GB of free storage (out of 1.4GB user space). Even the worst piece of formulaic pulp trash might be funny in a so-bad-it's-good kind of way; or at least there may be some anthropological interest (oh, so this is what women fantasize about?). Most of the stuff goes totally unread of course — I don't have time to even glance at a tenth of it — but I suppose I like having the option.

Anyway, it's interesting to note that as of January 2011, the top 100 free Kindle ebooks list consists of the following:

Count Type Example Notes
50 Gutenberg ebooks The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes Kindle conversions of public domain etexts from Project Gutenberg; mostly classics.
7 Games Every Word IMO Amazon should segregate these in their own section.
5 Thriller/Mystery The Perfect Woman Mostly in the gruesome-crimes subgenre, not the sleuthing subgenre.
8 Erotica/Romance Rough Cut Romance readers might claim that these are two categories but I defy you to draw the line among these titles.
2 ChickLit Stuck in the Middle (Sister-to-Sister Book 1) Apologies for the derogatory label but what do you want me to do with a cover and title like that?
11 Christian Fiction Fools Rush In (Weddings By Bella, Book 1) Often disguises itself quite stealthily as other genre fiction.
6 Other Fantasy Don't Die, Dragonfly Mostly spirits-and-vampires stuff, not Heroic Medieval Fantasy Product.
8 Alleged Nonfiction The Winners Manual Includes many crappy cookbooks and the Bible.
3 Other Fiction The Stolen Crown Arguably the bravest authors here, as non-series non-genre fiction has the least "author stickiness" of any fiction. Which isn't to say the writing's any good necessarily.

Saturday, August 08, 2009