Mirror

E-Book Piracy, worth worrying about?

With the introduction of Amazon Kindles and Apple iPads, e-books have become a widespread phenomenon. Its so popular now, that pirate copies have begun to appear. Internet is boasting with e-book search engines and quite frankly I was thrilled (and shocked) to see the books that were available for free!

The way the site was talked about by users indicated they didn’t realize or care that many of the electronic books offered were copyrighted and being shared without the owner’s permission. The attitude reminded me of the early days of MP3 sharing in the late 90s, back when nobody understood the implications of music copyright until Napster got shutdown.

All genres of books appear to be on offer at the site, from fiction to textbooks. Books released very recently sit alongside golden oldies. Virtually every entry in Amazon’s current bestseller fiction list is available, for example.

The quality of the e-books is good, as far as I can tell; there were no typos or major formatting errors in the few I downloaded. This is almost certainly because the pirated books are official releases that have had the digital rights management (DRM) components stripped out. The e-books are available in a variety of formats, from EPUB to HTML and PDF.

Funnily, the site is strongly reminiscent of the nascent world of MP3 sharing in the 1990s. However, nobody working within publishing will be surprised at the development of e-book piracy. Most have been waiting for it. There are significant differences between e-book piracy and that of music and movies, and these differences are very likely intentional.

The first difference is that there’s significant confusion over file formats. EPUB files won’t work on the Kindle, for example. Other e-book readers such as Entourage eDge, Kobo eReader or the Barnes and Noble Nook support EPUB but not Kindle’s proprietary AZW format. Some support the MOBI format, while others don’t.

One of the reasons the MP3 piracy scene was possible was that, along with the capability to shrink music to a 4MB file, it was built around a standard file format, MP3, which was supported by every media player. DivX brought the same standardization to movie piracy. In both cases, an entire ecosystem arose, based around the common file format.

EPUB is supposed to be the e-book standard file format, but by refusing to adopt it for the Kindle, Amazon is taking one step towards stopping a piracy ecosystem developing for e-books. Conversion to a compatible format is, of course, entirely possible, but Amazon may be hoping that the difficulty and hassle of doing so will put many off.

The other strategic difference when e-book readers are compared to media players is that e-book readers usually have built-in bookstore browsers. This was the failing that initially allowed MP3 piracy to gain a hold. In the late 90s, people had MP3 players and software but no legitimate source of MP3s, other than ripping them from CDs.

It took Apple and the development of iTunes to bring some order to the chaos, to the extent that now most people are happy paying for music, and piracy is limited to a hard core of people who never had any intention of paying anyway. I must admit, I have begun to use iTunes more to purchase songs than get free applications!

While there are still many questions over e-book pricing, statistics released from the likes of Amazon indicate that people are happy making use of e-book stores straight from their devices. While piracy will always be an issue for any organization offering creative content online, all the signs are that those behind e-book readers have thought things through so that they’re able to avoid e-book piracy being a necessity, and also less of a temptation.

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