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Books Businesses The Almighty Buck United States

Libraries Are Fighting To Preserve Your Right To Borrow E-Books (cnn.com) 117

Librarian Jessamyn West writes for CNN: For the first two months after a Macmillan book is published, a library can only buy one copy, at a discount. After eight weeks, they can purchase "expiring" e-book copies which need to be re-purchased after two years or 52 lends. As publishers struggle with the continuing shake-up of their business models, and work to find practical approaches to managing digital content in a marketplace overwhelmingly dominated by Amazon, libraries are being portrayed as a problem, not a solution. Libraries agree there's a problem -- but we know it's not us. Public libraries in the United States purchase a lot of e-books, and circulate e-books a lot. According to the Public Library Association, electronic material circulation in libraries has been expanding at a rate of 30% per year; and public libraries offered over 391 million e-books to their patrons in 2017. Those library users also buy books; over 60% of frequent library users have also bought a book written by an author they first discovered in a library, according to Pew. Even Macmillan admits that "Library reads are currently 45% of our total digital book reads." But instead of finding a way to work with libraries on an equitable win-win solution, Macmillan implemented a new and confusing model and blamed libraries for being successful at encouraging people to read their books.

With print materials, book economics are simple. Once a library buys a book, it can do whatever it wants with it: lend it, sell it, give it away, loan it to another library so they can lend it. We're much more restricted when it comes to e-books. To a patron, an e-book and a print book feel like similar things, just in different formats; to a library they're very different products. There's no inter-library loan for e-books. When an e-book is no longer circulating, we can't sell it at a book sale. When you're spending the public's money, these differences matter. [...] Their solution isn't just unsupportive, it doesn't even make sense. Allowing a library like the Los Angeles Public Library (which serves 18 million people) the same number of initial e-book copies as a rural Vermont library serving 1,200 people smacks of punishment, not support. And Macmillan's statement, saying that people can just borrow e-books from any library, betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of how public libraries work. Macmillan isn't the first of the "big five" publishers to try to tweak their library sales model to try to recoup more revenue, but they are the first to accuse libraries of being a problem for them and not a partner.

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Libraries Are Fighting To Preserve Your Right To Borrow E-Books

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  • Libraries Are Fighting To Preserve Your Right To Borrow E-Books

    I'm not aware of such a right... Could some, please, refer me to the relevant document?

    • First Sale Doctrine (Score:5, Informative)

      by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @09:23PM (#59048240) Journal
      In the US there is the first sale doctrine [justice.gov] but similar rights exist in other countries. Once the copyright owner has sold a copy of their work to you, you have the right to dispose of it - including lending it to others - as you wish provided it is the original copy that you purchased.
      • by mi ( 197448 )

        That certainly applies to tangible goods, including books, but not to electronic files, where the very concept of "original copy" is meaningless...

        • Sure, but the same logic also proves that any restrictions whatsoever are nonsensical and malicious.

      • by eclectro ( 227083 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @09:48PM (#59048330)

        Let's not forget that the first-sale doctrine was a hard fought win at SCOTUS after publishers were demanding continuing royalties of physical books.

        The fact is the media has changed, but the tactics really haven't.

      • With the DRM that exists in eBooks and the DMCA that prohibits breaking it, the right of first sale is greatly crippled here. You can't temporarily lend an eBook without having specific lending DRM built-in and they're limiting the number of those types of eBooks that they're selling per library.
    • by ikhider ( 2837593 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @09:28PM (#59048268)
      Do you mean why should knowledge not belong exclusively to the privileged and moneyed? The idea of universal access to knowledge you find objectionable? Why not bring things back to the good old days like Czars and serfs (like its going now?) Why not ask Brewster Kahle https://www.onthecommons.org/m... [onthecommons.org] or this silly site https://www.librariesareessent... [librariesa...ential.com] or Andrew freakin' Carnegie the robber baron https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com] or...or Hypatia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] Why not let Amazon control EVERYTHING, where they can delete books you PAID FOR at will and you cannot WILL your books to a successor? https://stallman.org/amazon.ht... [stallman.org] Is that what you mean?
      • by mi ( 197448 )

        Do you mean why should knowledge not belong exclusively to the privileged and moneyed?

        No, Mr. Spin, that's not a paraphrase of my question. Incorrect.

        I'm simply asking, why shouldn't a creator enjoy unlimited rights over his creation. Don't like a particular creator's conditions? Don't get into a contract with him — free country.

        Why not let Amazon control EVERYTHING

        Amazon does not control my library. If you let them control yours, that's your problem — or not a problem, whatever the case might b

        • I'm simply asking, why shouldn't a creator enjoy unlimited rights over his creation. Don't like a particular creator's conditions? Don't get into a contract with him — free country.

          Because, in the United States, that is not what copyright is defined as. It is a limited right.

          According to the US Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 8
          “To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.”

          Further Title 17 of the US Code, Chapter 1, Section 108 [cornell.edu] specifically provides exemption to copyright for libraries to make and distribute copies to patrons.

          There are

          • by mi ( 197448 )

            Because, in the United States, that is not what copyright is defined as.

            I'm not talking about law, but rather morals and ethics. If, without him, the things wouldn't get created at all, why shouldn't he (and his descendants) own it in perpetuity?

            Wouldn't it have been great, if the ability to create useful/beautiful things gave a more pronounced evolutionary advantage — giving the kin of the wheel's inventor, for example, more means against the rapists [sciencedirect.com] and invaders?

            Same question about Shakespeare's bro

      • by wwphx ( 225607 )
        I especially loved the bit about Macmilan saying "that people can just borrow e-books from any library". Me, living in New Mexico, I can't borrow books from Phoenix Public Library. I can ILL them, but I can't get ebooks from them. HUGE difference.
    • Libraries Are Fighting To Preserve Your Right To Borrow E-Books

      I'm not aware of such a right... Could some, please, refer me to the relevant document?

      First you gotta fight for your right to party, then, the libraries will fight for your right to borrow e-books.

  • Yes. I am part of that microscopic minority of people who buys, reads, and collects paper books. I use them, abuse them with my note taking and they have a warm place in my heart. E-books do not.
    • by scdeimos ( 632778 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @10:05PM (#59048388)
      I guess that makes two of us. The only time I get e-books is when they're a DRM-free version that accompanies my paper book purchase.
      • by shubus ( 1382007 )
        I'll occasionally stuff a few PDF's in my e-reader for convenience, but mostly it gathers dust. IMHO, serious reading requires a REAL book in your hands.
        • For my use cases, e-books are better than pulp paperbacks for vacation reading, but anything I'd be willing to buy in hardcover on nice paper is best in book form.
        • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
          I read ebooks almost exclusively, usually on my phone. I can keep dozens or hundreds on there and grab more from my calibre server whenever I want.

          The form factor of the phone is easier to hold when I'm eating or relaxing, I can read afew pages while I wait for the kids, or in line at the checkout. If I'm driving I just turn on the TTS engine and let the computer read the book to me. When I'm not driving I can switch to reading myself in the same place.
          I read alot!
          • by wwphx ( 225607 )
            I recently started and haven't quite finished a major purge of my physical books. I own several thousand ebooks, and they are my major purchase mode. Main reason: space. I don't like the amount of space they take up, and I anticipate an international move within the next decade and I don't want to be carting dozens and dozens of boxes of books! I still buy one now and again, and I'm still keeping select favorites, like my Terry Pratchetts and some of my programming stuff, but it's mostly epubs from now
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      You may prefer paper books, but age doesn't play into it. We've got a lot of elderly people in our library system using Kindles. The ability to resize the print for old eyes is a godsend for some folks.
    • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @11:00PM (#59048532)

      I felt the same way as you for a long time - until I had shoulder surgery a few years ago. I had three months where I basically wasn’t allowed to do *anything* with my right hand and arm. Holding a book and flipping pages one-handed was possible, but awkward - I dropped my book and lost my place on multiple occasions.

      Finally I said “what the heck” and bought a Kindle - and found I didn’t hate it after all. After a few days it didn’t seem any different than reading off paper. Except for one thing... I could adjust the type size to make it easier on my old eyes.

      Now I routinely checkout e-books from my local library. I occasionally go back to paper, but generally only if I can’t get a book in digital form. I am still wary of Amazon - when I purchase e-books, stripping the DRM is the first thing I do - but I’m definitely a convert to the digital medium.

      • by CaptQuark ( 2706165 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @11:56PM (#59048664)
        I also like e-books better than paper books. I also like the ability to change the font size. I like that I can read in dim surroundings with the back lighting. I like the ability to search Google for any word I don't recognize in context. I like the ability to highlight, annotate, and comment within the book. I like being able to send corrections like missing words or misspellings to the publisher. I like being able to search the book for a certain word or phrase I remember somewhere in the story. I like that I can carry 8000+ books on my Kindle in the size of a 20-page paperback. I like that I can purchase a book online and have it appear on my Kindle in 30 seconds, even from my hotel room. I like that I can send a PDF file to my Kindle email address and carry a copy of that document or illustration with me (albeit in grayscale. Do YOU remember where all the dragonholds are on Pern?).

        I have a large collection of paperbacks that I rarely re-read anymore, but I might be tempted more often if every one of them was in my Kindle. And it would free up six bookcases of space in my den.

        ---
        • I do wish the image handling were better on the Kindle. I usually load up maps on my laptop or my iPad so I can easily move them around and zoom in/out.

          Apropos of the GP: the last paper book I read was earlier this year - Donald Kingsbury’s “Psychohistorical Crisis”, an unofficial (and thinly-disguised) sequel to Asimov’s “Foundation” series. It wasn’t available digitally at all (except as a very poor PDF on archive.org), and it wasn’t in our local library

          • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
            Pipe it through calibre. I maintain calibre on my linux workstation and upload the library to my cloud server, password protected of course.

            That way I can manage metadata and tweak the layout or convert the format on my workstation and grab books off my cloud server wherever I am.
        • I have a large collection of paperbacks that I rarely re-read anymore, but I might be tempted more often if every one of them was in my Kindle. And it would free up six bookcases of space in my den.

          Back in the early days of cable, when I was on @home and it came with DejaNews, it was easy to leech masses of ebooks. That sort of thing is a treasure. I would be surprised if you couldn't find downloads for every book you own, although some of them may have annoying scan errors. Almost all of my books are in storage, but I can still read 'em...

      • by kackle ( 910159 )
        My mother reads much and often orders books via the library that have large type/font for her aging eyesight.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 05, 2019 @09:28PM (#59048266)

    Stallman - The Right to Read, from 1997: https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.en.html [gnu.org].

  • by Streetlight ( 1102081 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @09:31PM (#59048280) Journal
    By libraries doing this, e-book publishers might find their income reduced more than the OP proposal. Of course, library users would need to carry around the more bulky product called a book.
    • Though keep in mind that the large publisher Cengage has recently announced that they will no longer be printing and selling printed textbooks. Likely the tip of the iceberg, at least for textbooks.
    • By libraries doing this, e-book publishers might find their income reduced more than the OP proposal. Of course, library users would need to carry around the more bulky product called a book.

      If they wanted to do that, they'd be doing it already. In fact, what most library users seem to want these days is audiobooks, then ebooks, and finally paper books as a last resort. You don't even have to go to the library, and almost everyone has some digital device to read them on. Paper books are for old people who find tablets confusing.

      I don't actually believe that, but now I only want to own paper copies of exceptional books. I find massive possessions to be an inconvenience, especially ones which are

  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday August 05, 2019 @09:41PM (#59048316) Homepage Journal

    But on the other hand, since my local library didn't have enough copies of a book I wanted to read, I just found someplace I could download it. Now I have it forever.

    • The "forever" may depend on the quality of paper and ink used to print your copy. Digital copies may have a limited lifetime on your ability to access them. A single neutrino or a small flux of them and other problems, such as heat, rf energy, magnetic or electric fields, etc., as well as software availability or changes may prove the undoing of the digital readability.
      • by ncc74656 ( 45571 ) *

        The "forever" may depend on the quality of paper and ink used to print your copy. Digital copies may have a limited lifetime on your ability to access them. A single neutrino or a small flux of them and other problems, such as heat, rf energy, magnetic or electric fields, etc., as well as software availability or changes may prove the undoing of the digital readability.

        This is a solved problem. Ever hear of backing up your computer? The home server that holds my ebook collection (among other things) is m

      • as well as software availability or changes may prove the undoing of the digital readability.

        Since .epub files are just zipped containers of HTML, style sheets, and a .jpg of the cover art, I doubt the ability to read them will be lost anytime soon.

        ---

      • Almost all of my paper books are in storage where I can't access them. All of my ebooks are on a HDD next to me, where I can access them. (and in another one too)

    • I tweeted the same thing to one of the librarians who shared this article. This type of action doesn't do as much to increase sales as the publishers think it does.
  • by couchslug ( 175151 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @09:42PM (#59048318)

    What is not preserved is not remembered.

  • by magarity ( 164372 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @10:15PM (#59048420)

    I recall an interview with a reasonably success author who said a lot of authors and publishers have a love/hate relationship with libraries. On the one hand if every public library in the US bought just one copy of an author's book it would be a massive best seller. On the other hand, it's hard to realize that not everyone who borrows it there is not automatically a retail customer for their own copy. One's natural tendency is think that when one is on the receiving end of the royalties, even though it isn't true.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      if every public library in the US bought just one copy of an author's book it would be a massive best seller.

      wonder how big a role tax-funded libraries play in the large amounts of money many politicians get from book sales, which can be the source of almost all their wealth

    • On the other hand, it's hard to realize that not everyone who borrows it there is not automatically a retail customer for their own copy.

      The average author would need to take out a second mortgage on the home they don't own to afford to pay retail for all the books they themselves borrow from their local library.

      Some famous author once said that to write a book, you must first read one hundred. Might have been Virginia Woolf.

      As an author, you will get something around 10% of the cover price. Do the math: 1

  • idiots (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Tom ( 822 ) on Monday August 05, 2019 @10:26PM (#59048446) Homepage Journal

    These publishers are idiots. And that's putting it lightly.

    I have an entire room dedicated to my books in this house. They made up a considerable part of the weight when we moved. I spent over 10k just on the shelves they're in and I've bought several rare books that cost three digit figures - off the press, not because they're antiques. I have the full set of everything ever published by several different authors. I've had a stack of books to read next for 30+ years.

    And all of that started in the local libraries when I was a kid.

    Limiting libraries is shooting yourself in the foot, then the other foot, then both knees. It's about the most stupid thing you can do when you're in the business of books. I actually can't think of anything more stupid than that. Even burning down your print shop comes in a distant second.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      But they're not in the business of books. They're in the business of making their numbers for this quarter. Books are just the "stuff" this particular business uses to make their numbers. The MBAs were taught that the quarterly numbers matter, not what a particular company might happen to actually do.

      The idea of investing in their customers' interests as children in order to benefit from that interest over the customers' entire adult life, is so utterly strange to the MBAs' way of thinking that they won't

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        That's actually a very good and very, very sad point right there.

        Yes, the true damage the financial industry is doing to the world is not the last or the coming financial crisis. It's this pattern of thought.

  • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @01:15AM (#59048876)

    If libraries had somehow never existed, and were only invented this decade, the first one to open would be instantly sued out of existence. The only reason we have them is that they are inherited from a time before the publishing industry was so influential. Compare with the video or DVD rental situation, for example: You can get those from libraries too, but to be legally in the clear they have to buy special 'rental' editions that cost a great deal more than the standard edition.

    • Libraries predate publishing as an industry. Unless monastic orders count as industry... I suppose they also did lots of brewing and art...as for DVDs, are you sure that's right? Only sometimes do they have a rental version (which usually skips the special features and has fewer versions on it) at my library, often it is the retail copy. I'd assumed the rental versions were cheaper. I'd had a similar experience with Netflix when I had a disc plan, only a subset of new releases were rental editions.
    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      to be legally in the clear [video rental stores] have to buy special 'rental' editions that cost a great deal more than the standard edition.

      In which country?

      In the United States, video rental store chains such as Family Video are allowed to rent out the retail version of a movie or console game. Rental stores negotiate with movie distributors for stripped-down "rental" editions for two reasons: lower price per copy, and a guarantee that the distributor won't tell retailers not to sell to specific people who happen to run video rental stores. The only restrictions on "rental, lease, or lending" pursuant to 17 USC 109 are on phonorecords (such as

  • by cats-paw ( 34890 ) on Tuesday August 06, 2019 @01:19AM (#59048886) Homepage

    Remember how the original copyright term was 14 years.

    Then this happened : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    The fuckwits basically said congress gets to do what they want, even though the constitution EXPLICITLY calls for limited term for copyrights. The idea is that it is a deal. you get copyright protection, and a monopoly on publishing, for a LIMITED time, and then we get the work in the public domain.

    An unfortunate example of "both sides do it", the mickey mouse protection act passed, and survived the legal challenge and now immortal corporations will end up with perpetual copyrights since it will simply be extended again and again.

    Fuck copyright. Once they decided to screwed us over like that, they abandoned all legitimacy to enjoying copyright protection.

    so download those e-books and torrent them please.

    thanks.

  • The "property" aspect of "intellectual property" is just a metaphor. It's a set of rules that we apply to make copyright have some sort of analog to real world objects.

    When it comes to purchasing books and other physical media it tends to work adequately. The data is never copied; it's simply moved around. The complexities of copyright don't matter too much.

    When we have pure digital copies, the metaphor collapses. We are are own publisher. We can't move data. We can only copy it. We can simulate moving
  • Borrowing data sounds dumb.
  • Rainy/snowy day. Can't get out? Lazy and laying around. You can order/download an e-book. Physical books you have to go out to purchase. Can't count the number of times that I just wanted something to read, but didn't want to go out and buy it.

    Have the kindle software installed on your phone? That book is always with you.

    With library e-books, you can only have 1 copy. Meaning, you can not have it on every mobile device. But where a library is only open during specific hours for the borrowing o
  • The library market for print books isn't nearly as simple as this article would have you believe

    Many of the physical books at your library, particularly the new releases, are likely to be leased from the publisher. The library holds onto them for a set period of time and then returns or destroys them in exchange for new books. The lend/lease books usually have a sticker on the spine of the book jacket.

    "The more you know..." (TM)

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