UK Amazon Kindle Forum discussion
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Current problems for authors with Kindle Unlimited
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Apparently, this makes KU think the whole book has been read and thus they get paid for all the pages in that book.
If I find the link again, I'll post it here.

http://the-digital-reader.com/2016/03..."
That isn't the one I saw, but it says more or less the same thing.
But I wonder if it is not just a problem with deliberate scammers,
Presumably - and I could be wrong - but when a reader uses a TOC positioned at the back of a book won't it show that they have got to the end of the book to KU, even if they haven't read that far yet?
And - for that matter - what about footnotes? They are often put at the end of the file.



What if you place the Maps at the back?


I originally put the TOCs at the back of my books after reading David Gaughran's 'Let's Get Visible' because it takes up some of the 'Look Inside' space. I'm not criticising David as he couldn't have foreseen this problem. He also offers a lot of useful advice in his book. However, I think it's shocking that Amazon have been pulling the books of genuine authors (not scammers) without any warning.
I spent yesterday afternoon shifting my TOCs to the back of my books and re-uploading them. It's just not worth the risk.

So now it seems that the dishonest ones are bumping up their page count by including any old rubbish. I have heard of some which include "bonus" translations of their books into other language - all badly google translated of course - and the English version is right at the back of the book (to boost the KU pages read numbers).
We need to be reporting these sorts of tricks to Amazon.

If it had been superfluous crap, damn straight he'd have ask for a refund.

Interesting, a properly laid out academic book will have endnotes at the back, perhaps a bibliography and appendices you're referred to in the text.
Done properly the reader will have read the end of the book long before the middle :-)
In brief, a number of authors who have committed no offence are having their books taken down. While a number of authors whose books are encouraging outright scamming, gaming the "pages read" system, are continuing to publish and profit.
There's a full account on the blog written by David Gaughran, himself self-published and a Goodreads author too, I believe, though I daren't leave this box to check for the link. The blog post can be found at:
http://ow.ly/ZlU1E