Once everyone has a kindle/nook/whatever, I expect book sales to begin declining somewhat.
On the other hand, the audience for books is very different from the audience for software. Maybe the impact will be less.
On the other hand, the audience for books is very different from the audience for software. Maybe the impact will be less.
I view it as being a natural development of a materialistic approach toward literature, where the story's value is conflated with its charged price, to the point where people in general can't separate the two. E-pirates tend to view the story as a commodity that is to be taken since it is unobtainable or its charged post is perceived to be too high for monetary payment. It's just a latter stage of materialistic capitalism, more or less
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
E-books, piracy, and the commodification of literature
08/12/2010 02:31:00 AM
- 1201 Views
So we shouldn't just hook up writers to huge hamster wheels and force them to write and run?
08/12/2010 04:58:16 AM
- 1256 Views
I agree with most of what you say, Tom
09/12/2010 03:16:48 AM
- 842 Views
Let us say "materialistic culture".
09/12/2010 03:30:39 AM
- 840 Views
That'll work
09/12/2010 03:41:18 AM
- 745 Views
I think that the idea of "the commodification of literature" is one that is flawed
08/12/2010 07:53:50 AM
- 964 Views
Discussions of ebook piracy are largely irrelevant until more people use e-readers.
08/12/2010 10:41:40 AM
- 838 Views
E-piracy is a symptom, not a cause
09/12/2010 03:22:05 AM
- 819 Views
Uhm, or they just want to read and can't afford to spend money on books?
10/12/2010 05:56:53 PM
- 712 Views
Re: E-books, piracy, and the commodification of literature
09/12/2010 03:46:39 AM
- 807 Views
Sorry...as soon as you said you injected Marxist ideas into it I had to stop reading...otherwise
19/12/2010 06:10:12 AM
- 753 Views