Indie and Self-Pub Book Corner discussion
Amazon and its Kindle lending tricks
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Larry
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Jan 09, 2012 08:56PM

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Also, Kindle lending for the one two-week period is a completely different thing than Kindle Select, and that's how Amazon gets around it.
Basically Kindle Select is a whole different animal than EITHER Kindle lending OR library lending of Kindle titles. Members don't pay anything to use Kindle lending. If they go to a private source -- say, borrowing a Kindle title from a friend, or using one of the several lending sites out there, nobody pays anyone anything for the loan (but a book can only be loaned out once, ever for two weeks).
Library lending is its own thing, with licensing fees paid to Amazon.
Kindle Select is a completely different option where Prime members pay the $79 and can borrow one Select title per month, plus they get the streaming video, and the unlimited 2-day shipping from anything Amazon sells that's marked as Prime. Authors are compensated for having their books in this program out of a pool, so nobody yet knows how well they'll be paid.

I didn't say the library renter was the same person, but would they otherwise be eligible to borrow the book? The point is that while enrolled authors may be getting a token royalty, something I just heard, Amazon is still the big winner.

I like some of the free digital books available online websites. There are a few with really good books if you just want something. A library specializes in a quality of books per say. There are cheaper books that don't cost nearly as much than a library book available out there at sites like Amazon. Personally I use a library for ebooks or just books. But an elibrary uses for ebooks are 1 loan copies simultaneously which is slow for waiting for a ebook when other persons have it out for two three weeks.


My knowledge is from Wiki which I read some time ago. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_L...



I have books in my local library, and from time to time I look them up in the catalog. When they are checked out, I dance a little happy dance.