Judge OKs Class-Action eBook Price-Fixing Suit

Status
Not open for further replies.

alphaalphaalpha

Honorable
Mar 7, 2012
6
0
10,510
[citation][nom]julianbautista87[/nom]they wanted to fight the Amazon's monopoly with a more aggressive and expensive monopoly. XD[/citation]

Amazon was only becoming a monopoly because they were willing to sell eBooks at low prices, benefiting the consumer, whereas the other eBook suppliers (and the publishers) wanted to have higher prices.
 

bustapr

Distinguished
Jan 23, 2009
550
0
18,930
[citation][nom]julianbautista87[/nom]they wanted to fight the Amazon's monopoly with a more aggressive and expensive monopoly. XD[/citation]
amazon didnt have a monopoly on the market. they had competition from borders and B&D at the time with great competitive pricing. Only reason Amazon steamrolled on the competition was because they made the kindle, which was by far superior to the competitions ebook readers.
 

g00fysmiley

Distinguished
Apr 30, 2010
476
0
18,930
"The launch of the iBookstore in 2010 fostered innovation and competition, breaking Amazon's monopolistic grip on the publishing industry. Since then, customers have benefited from eBooks that are more interactive and engaging. Just as we've allowed developers to set prices on the App Store, publishers set prices on the iBookstore."

If I pay more for it I find the book more interactive and engaging... here I thought it was the story I was reading, not the price i paid for the book. Man all these years those hard cover readers really must enjoy them so much more than me reading the same text on paperback, I've been doing it wrong,. thank you apple for teaching me the way >_<

I wanted to get an ereader about a year-ish ago then I saw the price was more than paperbacks and laughed ... digital copy costing more than the physical media is ridiculous. I hope the courts fine the crap out of these companies and hopefully it'll bring down the prices of e books to acceptable levels where it makes sense since it costs them nothing on distribution
 

arlandi

Distinguished
Nov 25, 2007
21
0
18,560
[citation][nom]danwat1234[/nom]Isn't that bookshelf in Myst?[/citation]

no, that's the shelf in GoG.

"from eBooks that are more interactive and engaging."
what happen to imagination??
 

ubercake

Distinguished
Oct 28, 2009
308
0
18,960
We're actually to a point where most e-books are more expensive than their paperback counterparts. How do they justify this when the publishing cost is so low for the e-book?

Let's take these suckers down!!!
 

del35

Distinguished
May 22, 2009
495
0
18,930
Amazon seems like a beacon of freedom compared to the Apple handyourwalletprison. Tis Apple magical contribution to technology. Never thought I would find myself loving Amazon, Google, and Microsoft.
 
G

Guest

Guest
This all depends one which sale model you prefer. The Amazon model is: "Mr. Publisher, you sell Amazon the books at a very discounted price and Amazon will turn around and set the retail price even lower (to even below the suggested retail price) to sell to our customers". Amazon loses money on every e-book they sell. But, they make by selling e-book readers, i.e. Kindles. The Publishers make lower profits, or lose money, and the writers (as always) get squat. Customers pay artificially low prices.

The Agency Model is Apple saying to the Publishers: "Mr. Publisher, you sell your books in the iBookStore at whatever price you want. Whatever the price Apple will get a 30% commission on every sale". Publishers make an appropriate profit, writers earn more, Apple makes 30% commission (just like products sold in the iTunes store). Customers pay suggested retail prices.
 

blazorthon

Distinguished
Sep 24, 2010
761
0
18,960
[citation][nom]Mac Help[/nom]This all depends one which sale model you prefer. The Amazon model is: "Mr. Publisher, you sell Amazon the books at a very discounted price and Amazon will turn around and set the retail price even lower (to even below the suggested retail price) to sell to our customers". Amazon loses money on every e-book they sell. But, they make by selling e-book readers, i.e. Kindles. The Publishers make lower profits, or lose money, and the writers (as always) get squat. Customers pay artificially low prices.The Agency Model is Apple saying to the Publishers: "Mr. Publisher, you sell your books in the iBookStore at whatever price you want. Whatever the price Apple will get a 30% commission on every sale". Publishers make an appropriate profit, writers earn more, Apple makes 30% commission (just like products sold in the iTunes store). Customers pay suggested retail prices.[/citation]

When eBooks cost more than paperback books (and often even more than hard cover books too), there is absolutely no excuse. Customers should pay less than a physical copy of the book would cost when they buy an eBook.
 

mac help

Honorable
May 16, 2012
5
0
10,510
So the problem, as you see it, is NOT with Apple (who, in reality, is just an agent for the Publishers) but with the Publishers who want to charge more for this new and emerging technology.

The problem here is that neither you nor I have the fainted idea of what costs are actually involved in printing a book. Or creating, publishing, and selling an eBook.
 

blazorthon

Distinguished
Sep 24, 2010
761
0
18,960
[citation][nom]mac help[/nom]So the problem, as you see it, is NOT with Apple (who, in reality, is just an agent for the Publishers) but with the Publishers who want to charge more for this new and emerging technology.The problem here is that neither you nor I have the fainted idea of what costs are actually involved in printing a book. Or creating, publishing, and selling an eBook.[/citation]

Well, Apple played a part in this too. If not for Apple, it wouldn't have happened at all. Apple used the eBook publisher's greed to make more money in what seems to be an illegal way. Apple is just as much at fault for this, if not more so, because they seem to have been both the catalyst for it (it seems that it was Apple who first contacted the eBook publishers about this), Apple was the means for it, and Apple should be held accountable for it too.

I can't imagine the costs of making an eBook being greater than that of a hard cover book, especially with long books. In fact, I can't imagine the costs of an eBook being anywhere near that of a paper-back book, let alone a hard cover book. It's the same words, except instead of spending money on ink, paper, the glue to hold it all together with in the spine (or any other method used for holding the book together, I'm not an expert on books), and for hard cover books, the hard covers. The eBooks should be substantially cheaper to make and distribute.
 

mac help

Honorable
May 16, 2012
5
0
10,510
By that reasoning, electric cars with far fewer parts than a conventional gasoline engine powered car, should be substantially less expensive that a gasoline powered car. That doesn't seem to be the case, though.
 

blazorthon

Distinguished
Sep 24, 2010
761
0
18,960
[citation][nom]mac help[/nom]By that reasoning, electric cars with far fewer parts than a conventional gasoline engine powered car, should be substantially less expensive that a gasoline powered car. That doesn't seem to be the case, though.[/citation]

Not at all... An eBook is just some data, not a full piece of hardware plus the data like the books are. eBooks aren't physical at all. They are just the books, except without the cost of printing them onto books. Why should the data be more expensive than the data plus a physical medium for it? It shouldn't. It's more akin to saying that a music album should not be more expensive when it is a digital download (legally, of course) than it is when it is on a CD, except the CD is probably much cheaper to manufacture than even most books are.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.