![]() ![]() If Hachette books were DRM free, the company could announce an "Amazon-refugee discount" of 10% of all its ebook titles at Google Play, Ibooks, and Barnes and Noble, and offer a tool to convert your Kindle library to work on one of those other players. Meanwhile, Hachette - publishing's most ardent DRM advocate - and Amazon continue to duke it out in a ghastly and abusive public spat in which Amazon is attempting to extort deeper discounts from Hachette by de-listing, delaying and obfuscating its titles. Doherty's philosophy is that books get sold by being part of a wider context in readers' lives - being something they talk and think about and share, and that DRM just gets in the way of that. ![]() ![]() Doherty spent some time talking about the business outcomes of life without DRM (in short, there's no new piracy of Tor books as a result of publishing without it), but really focused his talk on the community of readers and writers, and their conversation, and the role Tor plays there. Two years ago, Tor Books, the largest sf publisher in the world (and publisher of my own books) went DRM-free yesterday, Tor's founder and publisher Tom Doherty took to the stage to explain why he dropped DRM from his books. ![]()
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