TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics
January 27th, 2009

‘Nearly 30% Of books sold for the Kindle are now above $9.99′

By David Rothman

consumeristimageSo reports The Consumerist. Books about computers and the Net are the biggest offenders, with 80 pecent above $9.99. Granted, all kinds of complexities exist. For example, some tech books bear high prices because the potential readership for them is limited. Still, the upward price creep is another reminder that Amazon needs close watching. Could Amazon’s efforts to herd people into the Kindle and Mobipocket formats also result in higher prices—with Amazon enjoying more than its share of the profits?

Oprah as quoted by the Consumerist: “”I know it’s expensive in these times, but it’s not frivolous because” the Kindle “will pay for itself. The books are much cheaper, and you’re saving paper.”

A kinder, gentler way for Amazon and publishers to get the public to pay somewhat more: Drop the DRM and standardize on ePub so people can own their books for real. With DRM, as shown by the OverDrive-Fictionwise mess, consumers don’t truly own their books. They’re just leasing them. Consumers have no assurance of permanent access in the original format. Publishing is a tough business, and publishers need to be profitable. DRMless books could help by increasing the value offered readers. To Fictionwise’s considerable credit, it’s adopting the ePub format and would rather not have to deal with DRM.

(Thanks to Dear Author’s Jane.)

Digg us. Slashdot us. Facebook us. Twitter us. Share the news.
  • Digg
  • Slashdot
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • NewsVine
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace
  • Suggest to Techmeme via Twitter
  • Netvibes
  • Turn this article into a PDF!

2 Responses to “‘Nearly 30% Of books sold for the Kindle are now above $9.99′”

  1. “They’re just leasing them.”

    And as long as I can continue to buy titles at a substantially cheaper price than a print copy that is fine with me!! Folks rent/lease all kinds of items why not add books to the list.

    Nothing lasts forever – not even print copies which can be lost, stolen, damaged, etc.

  2. [...] Un propriétaire de Kindle a utilisé Jungle-search.com pour trier les livres numériques proposés par Amazon par prix et a montré que le 22 janvier 2009, 29,65 % des livres vendus sur le Kindle Store sont au-dessus de 9,99 dolars. Sur un forum, un autre utilisateur a fait une répartition par catégorie montrant que les essais et les livres traitant d’informatique sont parmis ceux qui dépassent le plus ce prix plancher : 50 % pour les essais, 80 % pour les livres d’informatique ! Il faut reconnaître que l’absence de titres dans le domaine public dans ces catégories là, nuit certainement à la chute du prix moyen. En effet, les classiques sont souvent proposés pour une somme assez faible, servant de titres d’appel pour le reste de la création. Via Teleread. [...]

Leave a Reply

Subscribe without commenting