Blogue États-Unis
What is it about DRM that makes us so crazy?
Michael Jensen | 03/19/2009 | Numérisation
Because really, it’s so 20th century.
Digital Rights Management systems (on ebook files) is not unlike printing our books in non-photo-blue, so that nobody can photocopy them. Or having unrippable shrinkwraps on our books in bookstores. Or having some RFID system on every page that prevents skipping ahead….
It’s asking for misery—misery with customer service, misery because it angers our customers, misery because it relegates our publications to a previous mindset, treating a book as an isolated object that only exists in the form we control.
Publishing is much more than just producing a book, as we all know; and today, it’s much more than just producing a static object. As publishers, we have been conditioned to think about a book as being that static object that will be just as “fresh” in 2020 as it is now.
But the reality is that our marketplaces are increasingly fragile, and angering our customers is no way to build brand or market share. The reality is that our readers increasingly expect to start a book on the laptop, and finish it on the iPhone. The reality is that there *is no DRM that has not been broken by the pirate community.*
And further—for $400 or less, one can buy a scanner that produces a searchable PDF in about an hour, from a printed book.
So we need a new paradigm of thought, in which we recognize that our job is to distinguish our premium content from the welter of mediocre content; it’s to encourage readers (whether pirate or paying) to come buy another book from us, via links, promotion, and encouragement; to develop means of making the “new” or “updated” version available to paying readers for free, and pirate readers for a small fee; to find new and innovative ways to *take advantage* of superdistribution and viral distribution, rather than try to put tin-can roadblocks into the path of our readers’ 4x4s.
It’s hard, making this shift. But if publishers don’t, we may well ensure that we will find ourselves without a buying public at all.
Commentaires [0]
fils RSS
Catégories
Derniers articles
03/29/2010
03/22/2010
03/15/2010
03/12/2010
The iPad -- now, with marketing!
02/24/2010
02/23/2010
02/22/2010
01/04/2010
New Year's Resolution: Re-read These Articles
12/04/2009
11/25/2009
10/13/2009
10/07/2009
04/06/2009
Quid Pro Quo and the online experience
04/02/2009
Retaining Relevance as a Publisher
04/01/2009
03/30/2009
The Content of Things, and SEO
03/27/2009
Boosting the Canadian Books Catalog
03/26/2009
Open Access to Francophone Developing Countries
03/25/2009
XML Workflow and the Holy Grail
03/24/2009
Standards, Exceptions, and Perfection
03/19/2009
What is it about DRM that makes us so crazy?
03/18/2009
03/01/2009
Principaux critiques littéraires américains en littérature jeunesse et livres pour adultes
