The Sword and Laser discussion
Hachette to TOR Authors: You Must Keep the DRM On Your eBooks
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Another is that it doesn't make sense to have authors sign their rights based on region anymore. I've seen this even with e-book exclusive books where Google Books will refuse to sell me the book because I'm in Germany*. I think publishers still have a important role to play, but it's not clear to me why a publisher in London is needed to sell to GB and another in New York is needed to sell to the US for e-books. Someone in either city is perfectly capable of selling books to the entire English-speaking world. Most ad campaigns are online now anyways.
*Mostly it's to my advantage to be in Germany since amazon.de has both British and American books and then I pick the cheapest or soonest. Which goes to show that even with physical books it might not make sense to have nation-based publishers anymore.
eBooks make it much easier to self publish, but I imagine there are still benefits to having a large publisher or all the authors would be heading for the hills.
This is unfortunate for all the authors who are caught in the middle. Personally I think it should be up to the author, not the publisher if their books should be DRM free.
I'm personally opposed to DRM and think it leads to more piracy and not less in most situations, but it should be up to the person who actually created the work to decide for themselves.
This is unfortunate for all the authors who are caught in the middle. Personally I think it should be up to the author, not the publisher if their books should be DRM free.
I'm personally opposed to DRM and think it leads to more piracy and not less in most situations, but it should be up to the person who actually created the work to decide for themselves.



that company is bound to loose alot of business because of that kind strong-arm tactic...


This is pretty much right on the money.
I applaud TOR and anyone who tries to break down outdated barriers that only exist because people are afraid.
http://boingboing.net/2012/08/13/hach...