tomislav medak on Thu, 14 Jan 2016 16:22:59 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> aaaaarg lawsuit digest #ANON |
Aaaaarg complied with the take-down request for the scan of the book in question. It was after a while re-upped and again taken down. For the total time it was up, it was downloaded a small number of times, nothing that would, even if each download would convert into a lost sale, help the publisher sell any significant portion of a print run. As the download-to-sale ratio can reasonable be assumed to be much lower -- one in three, one in five or one in ten, whatever number you want to choose, the damage is small to negligible. It's an open debate how much piracy hurts small publishers, likely it does. However, what hurts them much more is the system of publishing dominated by the dynamics of large commercial publishing houses, distributors and vendors. In short, the publishing in the web of C. For example, in our small neck of the wood, large commercial publishers dominate the entire production and distribution chain, and we as a small publisher rarely see any money from our books that actually sell. Making our books available in parallel for download (http://monoskop.org/Mama) has at least helped us land them into the hands of readers who speak our 'quaint small language' around the Balkans. I assume though that things look different in the English-speaking world. Which brings me to another anecdotal argument. When I was studying in Zagreb in the mid 90s, the selection of books and journals I had access to in the university or public libraries was ridiculously antiquated and sparse. There were so many books I've heard of, I needed, and had slim chances of getting my hands onto. Twenty years down the line, things look radically different for my younger colleagues. They neither have to be at an academic institution nor at a rich academic institution to be able to access much of what is published worldwide and relevant to their work. Now, this obviously breaks some things, a.o. the academic privilege, the economic domination of universities in the global north, the interests of academic publishing oligopoly -- which is fighting back tooth and claw (see Elsevier v Sci-hub). Doug's previous book has been an important acquisition in the small public library that we run at mama. I hope that they keep coming and he continues writing them. The question is, as Brian suggests, that we have to start somewhere if we wish to see something else in this world. Sure, not letting things break that we don't want to get broken, but rather focusing on things that need breaking -- given the world of commercial academic publishing and the world of privilege to education, that's certainly not the small publishers. Best, Tom On Thu, Jan 14, 2016 at 10:20 AM, Balazs Bodo <[2]bodo@uva.nl> wrote: The public, selective, and strategic application of copyright infringement is a political tool. I learned that to preserve the collection some 'guardians' are inclined to struck ad-hoc deals with authors wishing to have their works taken down. It is a small sacrifice to preserve something of a greater value, _and_ making the right political point. Without knowing the circumstances I was wondering whether it would make sense to judge individual removal requests, such as this guy's, in the light of the potential costs of non-compliance, and the potential loss of not having this particular piece. Cheers b.- <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: