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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: 2, Troll) by aristarchus on Monday May 22 2017, @10:32AM

    by aristarchus (2645) on Monday May 22 2017, @10:32AM (#513430) Journal

    Of course, there is the more severe approach, as described in Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose [wikipedia.org], which interestingly enough involved a remaindered copy of Aristotle's work on Comedy, the second book of the Poetics. Nice plot, since we no longer have a copy of this work, due to copyright maddened publishers, or just puritanical Domincan monks, who poisoned the upper outside corners of the text, so that anyone who read it, and licked their fingers and thumb to turn the page (Parchment, it seems, requires more friction than paper) would die with a blackened tongue. At least that is what the Franciscans who were sent to investigate concluded. I have always wanted to do this, but

    in the end, the poisoner is chased into the monastery library where he knocks over a lamp, and the whole library goes up in flames, including Aristotle's Comedy, which is why we do not have it extant today.

    Good movie, [imdb.com] starring Sean Connery and Christian Slater, with a really realistic portrayal of life in Medieval Europe, trust me, I was there. But don't get your saliva on books, it's just not right, or good for the books.

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