It's a Digital World...

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November 2011

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Nov 26, 20112,609 notes
In Fight with Amazon, Libraries Caught in the Crossfire  → publishersweekly.com

thelifeguardlibrarian:

Indeed, Penguin’s move suggests that the publishing industry’s long-simmering concern over Amazon’s dominant position and its aggressive new ventures in the e-book market are coming to a boil. A number of publishers, agents, and authors have been uneasy from the beginning over the Kindle/OverDrive library lending program. And though the program launched in September, its popularity has stoked fears that Kindle library lending could cut into e-book sales.

In a comment posted to PW’s Web site, Trident chairman Robert Gottlieb said he was most uncomfortable with the Kindle/OverDrive program because, even though the lending is managed by OverDrive, library patrons are directed to Amazon to get their borrowed book. “Libraries and those that serve them should not be redirecting readers under any circumstances unless it is to another nonprofit entity,” he wrote. “Publishers are happy to have libraries lend books, but not to retailers to use for their own benefit.” With reading now just a click away, he noted, “The game has changed.”

But, librarians note, it is publishers that have changed the game. Unlike print books, which libraries own, e-books are licensed and access is managed, an expansion of power for publishers. Where a publisher would never be permitted to pull its physical books off a library shelf, or limit lends, publishers in the e-book world can now decide whether to allow access to an e-book at all, how to do it, and under what terms. “Loaning e-books is like playing with some other kid’s ball on the playground,” explained Christopher Harris on the ALA blog. “There is always a risk that the other kid will take back his or her ball and go home. This is a game libraries have to play.” Harris added, “I just wish we could bring our own ball.”

Conversation on eBook lending and Penguin. Going to be a continuing topic for a while.

Nov 26, 201117 notes
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