What Can I Do About Book Pirates? 987
peterwayner writes "Six of the top ten links on a Google search for one of my books point to a pirate site when I type in 'wayner data compression textbook.' Others search strings actually locate pages that are selling legit copies including digital editions for the Kindle. I've started looking around for suggestions. Any thoughts from the Slashdot crowd? The free copies aren't boosting sales for my books. Do I (1) get another job, (2) sue people, or (3) invent some magic spell? Is society going to be able to support people who synthesize knowledge or will we need to rely on the Wikipedia for everything? I'm open to suggestions."
Already answered, sort of... (Score:5, Funny)
Just look through the comments for any story relating to MPAA or RIAA, substitute movies/albums for books. There you go.
People pirate your books because they are not good enough to pay for, because they aren't available in high quality open digital formats without DRM, you charge to much, you need to release the book as open source for free, and then make money on lectures and going on tours, and you can have a web page with a link which allows people to donate money directly to you without middlemen, and you can make money on advertisement.
There you go.
A Very Special Public Service Announcement (Score:5, Funny)
What Can I Do About Book Pirates?
Book pirates claim the partial income of several thousand authors yearly. Once book pirates get underneath the floor boards of your house, nothing gets rid of them. If you have book pirates, you'll notice tiny white dust particles near crevices and creases in your books and book shelves which are actually book pirate eggs. They will hatch and form book pirate larvae that can go weeks without books and still survive which makes extermination difficult. Once infected, a typical book enthusiast has nine to ten days before cells throughout the body are infected with the book pirate virus. You cannot cure book pirates but you can control them. There are means of prevention--a vaccine has been developed for book pirates type one and type two but there are several strains too rare and foreign to address. Book pirate build up occurs around the search engines and torrents of the internet and with them come social stigmas. Regular flossing and lawsuits will also help prevent book pirate and book related decay. If you or someone you know has book pirates or shows book pirate symptoms, get help, get tested and abstain from group readings.
live shows (Score:1, Funny)
you'll have to go on tour and hope to make money with a percentage of the gate and through book, cd and t-shirt sales at your shows. INFORMATION WANTS TO BE FREE!
sorry, just trolling.
only one alternative... (Score:4, Funny)
Write your next book using incredibly abstract language and concepts, so as to be useless to non-academicians. Then charge over $100 in order to milk this very limited market, who will hopefully never get organized enough to pirate the book.
It's what other people seem to do. Seriously, any book with a title like "... for practical people", or "... for real programmers" will get pirated. Surprise! That's the "practical" way to get technical books!
Take heart also that many of the pirates would probably not buy the book if that were the only option.
Wait wait wait (Score:0, Funny)
You came HERE, to Slashdot, where there is consistent and irrefutable support for what have to be some of the dumbest ideas about copyright ever uttered, and you expect something useful?
Good luck, there's a very small population of people here with ideas you can use, but they'll be drowned out by the idiots who routinely denounce copyright as though it raped their baby and murdered their granny.
Re:The good ole 'merican approach (Score:2, Funny)
Who's Sue? Is she hot?
Re:Information wants to be free? (Score:2, Funny)
I'm waiting for the "Imaginary property is stealing" memes - didn't you know that home photocopying is killing the book industry?
Re:Offer the Ebook for free. (Score:5, Funny)
Best of luck to you! It's quite a good reason to write a text book, but it looks like it may soon be the only reason to do it.
Actually the best and only reason to write a textbook is so you can win arguments by saying "I wrote the book on (insert topic of disagreement)!" and then smugly pulling the book from your shelf.
Re:A Very Special Public Service Announcement (Score:5, Funny)
What Can I Do About Book Pirates?
Hire book ninjas!
Re:The good ole 'merican approach (Score:2, Funny)
Ask Inky, Pinky and Blinky.
Re:What about me? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Offer the Ebook for free. (Score:5, Funny)
and then smugly pulling the book from your shelf.
Which contains only copies of your book, but which you pause to scan, for effect, before selecting at random an individual copy and exclaiming, "ah, here it is" and presenting it to your interlocutor along with an invoice.
Re:Offer the Ebook for free. (Score:3, Funny)
There is no more obnoxious advertising technique than masquerading it as an "Ask Slashdot" question.
Re:Offer the Ebook for free. (Score:3, Funny)
Really? I can think of plenty:
Re:Fortunately, this problem is easily solved. (Score:3, Funny)
Exactly, instead; cut out the binding and use a sheet scanner.