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posted by on Sunday May 21 2017, @09:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the amazon-would-never-be-underhanded dept.

Very recently, Amazon made a small, barely noticeable tweak to the way it sells books. And that little tweak has publishers very, very worried.

The change has to do with what Amazon calls the "Buy Box." That's the little box on the right-hand side of Amazon product pages that lets you buy stuff through the company's massive retail enterprise.

[...] It used to be that when you were shopping for a new copy of a book and clicked "Add to Cart," you were buying the book from Amazon itself. Amazon, in turn, had bought the book from its publisher or its publisher's wholesalers, just like if you went to any other bookstore selling new copies of books. There was a clear supply chain that sent your money directly into the pockets of the people who wrote and published the book you were buying.

But now, reports The Huffington Post, that's no longer the default scenario. Now you might be buying the book from Amazon, or you might be buying it from a third-party seller. And there's no guarantee that if the latter is true, said third-party seller bought the book from the publisher. In fact, it's most likely they didn't.

Which means the publisher might not be getting paid. And, by extension, neither is the author.

Understandably, both publishers and authors are deeply unhappy about this change.

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 22 2017, @01:59AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 22 2017, @01:59AM (#513258)

    > No one is quite sure where their books come from, including, it seems, Amazon itself

    Wild speculation -- perhaps there is a grey/black market for popular books? Many books are printed/bound in China (and other locations far from US or European publisher headquarters). Perhaps these printers are printing extra copies beyond the press run that was ordered by the publisher? Once the press/bindery is all set up it could be extremely cheap to run off more copies. Similar to ersatz fashion goods that are made in the same factories as the big brand names.

    If Amazon is fencing these copies (by not checking into the bona fides of marketplace sellers) I think that is Amazon's problem...because the publishers will sue them!

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