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DRM Books Media

DRM: How Book Publishers Failed To Learn From the Music Industry 212

Presto Vivace writes "In a blog post, danps explains how the music industry initially thought that the Internet meant that people wanted their music for free. In 2003 Apple persuaded the industry to use an online music store with DRM. But DRM just does not work for consumers, so by 2011 online music stores were DRM-free. Sadly, the book industry has not learned these lessons. And there are larger lessons for the gadget industry: 'The tech industry right now is churning out lots of different devices, operating systems and form factors in an attempt to get the One True Gadget — the thing you'll take with you everywhere and use for everything. That's a lovely aspiration, but I don't see it happening. What I see instead is people wanting to only carry around one thing at a time, and rotating through several: Smart phone for everyday use, tablet for the beach, laptop for the road, etc. If you can't get the book you paid for on each of those devices, it's a pain. As a reader I want to be able to put a book on everything as soon as I buy it so I always have a local (non-Internet dependent) copy — no matter which thing I run out of the house with.'"
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DRM: How Book Publishers Failed To Learn From the Music Industry

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  • by canadiannomad ( 1745008 ) on Saturday June 01, 2013 @12:24AM (#43880947) Homepage

    they like the feel, smell, texture of books

    Ok I'm curious... I've heard this type of comment before, and I don't get it.
    I read a lot before e-readers. I almost never smelt books, nor do I have some romantic idea about such things...
    BUT If I wanted my ebook to smell and feel like paper I'd tape some newsprint to the back.

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