this post was submitted on 21 Oct 2023
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It just feels weird to me that digital version of a book is treated as having limited amount...
It's just bytes in some computer.
Why would user A need to wait until user B is finished with the book, before being able to read it?
Because if it was actually legitimately unlimited, nobody would pay for books. There's Hoopla that my library also supports that has instant borrows of anything, but it's capped at 6 per month.
There are authors who make decent money, but there are a lot more who don't.
I understand the rationale, but that only means the author's contracts should be adjusted so that their revenue is function of the reads, not the sales. (Or some other metric)
Libraries are (generally) not for profit. There's not really the revenue stream to strike deals like that. Publishers are likely only getting a pittance from licensing to libraries, hell for most publishers they likely only do it as a PR move, and if they start charging per read... well, libraries may as well not bother with ebook licensing at that point and just put a book scanner in the library.
My understanding is that they actually do kind of get charged per read for digital copies. The contracts are weird, but there are terms where they have to treat them as "wearing out" like regular books do.
But the bottom line point remains the same. Libraries get favorable pricing compared to normal people and can't sustain the publishing industry.
And how do they get paid if everyone is reading from the library, who's allowed unlimited loans? Unless you raise their cost per title, which they can't afford.
I read 25 books some months, but some are 50, and some are more. Do you really want your library to pay for every book I read if they get charged per read?
If they don't, even the handful of authors who are making money now are in trouble. If that best seller is free without restriction from the library, what are the chances that even they sell enough to survive?
I think the point is if you like the book you hopefully buy a copy for yourself? I tend to read like 40 books a year and if I didn’t use the library extensively the foundations on my house would crumbled under the weight. As it is I still end up acquiring probably 5 or 10 new books a year despite everything.
(But at least they’re ones I know are good.)
If you knew you could borrow it any time for free, and you do your reading digitally, would you really buy it? Would most people?
I personally have bought a handful of physical books from my favorites with no intention of opening them just to have them on my bookshelf, but there are also multiple series I listen to 2-3 times a year that I haven't purchased because they're either available through my library or because they're available through scribd (where I read more than enough new books per month to justify the subscription). Unrestricted free availability is bound to cut pretty heavily into people paying for content, especially if we're talking people who are doing their reading digitally with ebooks and audiobooks anyways.
Well, yes. I probably still would. But that's me. And also, you're talking about "instant access" when actually if you want access to a specific and popular book there's usually a wait of a couple weeks to a couple months. So some people who really want that book are going to want to read it right now and might buy it for the instant access whenever they want?
At any rate, there are people who use the library and people who don't. I read like 2-3 digital books a year usually—only when the library failed to get a physical copy, basically. But I only buy a few of those books for home use (physically again) because there are only a few that I really like enough to own. But that has been the case with library users practically since libraries were invented, so it's not that new a situation.
Scribd I can't speak to as I don't use that at all, but it kind of sounds like Kindle Unlimited, so… if they're paying the authors, it needs to be adjusted enough to where the authors are getting a decent cut per use. This is the same as with Spotify and music. It's something that has to be worked out obviously, but there's nothing to say it couldn't happen as far as I know.
It's just the cost model. The authors usually write as their primary source of income, so they're selling each book. If they just sold one and everyone copied it, it would either have to be tremendously expensive or it wouldn't pay their bills. I brought my kids up not to pirate music and movies for the same reason - it doesn't support the artists. I'm actually a bit uncomfortable using the library for the same reason since I can afford the books if I just reprioritize a bit.
The same happens with movies in theater. When we switched to digital, a decades ago, they was like "everyone can have the movies at the same time, not like with limited physical copies".
It was a lie. Sure, everyone can have a copy on the release day, but not everyone will have the time-key for delock it from X days since Y date. So some theaters will have it first weeks, others only the third ones.
Again, this is not because the tech is not enabling this, but an attempt to extort more money (for earlier delock) from the theaters is there.