TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
July 20th, 2005

Microsoft’s Fair Use Dude and the AWOL Harry Potter book

By David Rothman

Doug works at Microsoft but is about to leave for law school, where he’ll specialize in–”surprise!”–intellectual property. Here’s a Doug-related case history, from an email to me:

Subject: Can I get the link to the Harry Potter book?

I purchased a copy from Waldenbooks, which promptly sent it to a random address at Microsoft. So I have paid for my book and do not have a copy (and probably am not going to get one, unless UPS does an amazing job of not losing packages with valuable contents).

So I am your ‘fair use’ dude, who has paid for a book, and probably will never see it. I will commit to destroying the book if I receive it, and keep the ebook version in its place (and I will not distribute it).

Class, what’s your advice? Should I have shared the Web address? I didn’t and would not have, even if the pirate page I saw had still been online. It no longer is. You can bet this would have been a close call. I really wanted to help the guy out. He even sent me a copy of his order for the p-edition.

Speaking of Harry: In just a weekend, J.K. Rowling’s new book accumulated more than $100 million in U.S. revenue–at least several times than the annual sales of the entire e-book biz in the States.

Digg us! Slashdot us! Share the news.
  • Digg
  • Slashdot
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • TailRank
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Netvouz
  • YahooMyWeb

2 Responses to “Microsoft’s Fair Use Dude and the AWOL Harry Potter book”

  1. I suppose if the copy of the receipt he sent you included an “OK” note from JK Rowling, why not?

    John

  2. Yep, that would do the trick–well, maybe with permission added from a publisher or lit agent.

    Hello, Prof. Kingsfield? Where are you when we need you?

    David

Leave a Reply

Subscribe without commenting