PLR (Private Label Rights) and MRR (Master Resell Rights) can be sold and modified to the extent of
ebooks resell license.
These requirements are simply out of reach for most
eBook resellers and self - publishers, or they're just not feasible for larger ones.
While we support many large customers with their own Adobe Content Server 4 infrastructure, we feel that self - publishers and smaller
eBook resellers need more attention.
However, it is both prohibitively expensive and technically complicated for small to medium size self - publishers and
eBook resellers.
Finally, many
eBook resellers have gone out of business in the past few years, is your purchases protected?
Furthermore, I can only imagine the reaction of retail
ebook resellers when they are asked to pay advances on ebooks!
But the pieces of the Scribd store I'm most excited about is the real - time reporting (compared with a lag of a month or more with most
ebook resellers, including Amazon), the option to easily provide free updates to existing content, and the variety of adjustable display options — like preview amount, refreshingly optional DRM, and purchase - link images.
If a bricks and mortar store can servive on a 50 % margin, with all the overhead it has to cover, how can it be that
an eBook reseller needs anything like that margin to prosper.
1) IngramSpark for all POD except Amazon, 2) CreateSpace for POD distribution to Amazon.com, and 3) an ebook aggregator like Smashwords, BookBaby or Vook to reach the online
ebook resellers.
All it takes is for Amazon to change royalty rates or introduce
ebook reselling or stores to pull back on stocking a certain publisher like happened with S&S.
Getting back to the Google
eBooks reseller program... How much did Google invest in it to ensure success?
JanetPublishing Newsdigital lending /
ebook reselling / hidden camera / lawsuit / Libraries / Netherlands / pets / systemic racism5 Comments
Not exact matches
Google is being tight - lipped with technical details on its
Ebooks product, particularly with regard to
reseller integration.
Secondly, many places you might get public domain books create their own
ebooks — they are free to use, but you can't
resell them.
Earlier this year, Google set January 31 as the date that the Google
eBooks catalog and the ability to sell Google
eBooks would be removed from all
reseller sites.
Their own research points to 90 % of all
eBooks listed on TC are pirated and that criminals are
reselling books they download from torrent websites.
You are also assuming that because you can
resell a used book, you are entitled to also
resell a used
ebook, which of course is not the same.
Their own research suggests 90 % of all
eBooks that are listed on the site are pirated and that criminals are
reselling books they download from torrent websites.
It is ironic that this organization basically turned into a puppet for audio, video and
eBook pirates to safeguard themselves by saying any content may not be
resold and is only for private use.
You shall not: (1) share,
resell, rent, assign, timeshare, distribute, or transfer all or part of the
ebook or any rights granted hereunder to any other person; (2) duplicate the
ebook, except for a single backup or archival copy; (3) remove any proprietary notices, labels, or marks from the
ebook; (4) transfer or sublicense title to the
ebook to any other party.
Amazon and Apple both filed patents last week to make
reselling eBooks a reality, and the collective reaction by readers and book - buyers across the Internet was ambivalent.
Bugabong.com is where you can download free
ebooks with
resell rights.
2 min readOver the past week, debate has intensified over the practice of
reselling eBooks.
In traditional publishing, you have to wait until the book is printed on paper before you sell the
ebook, and you can not sell
eBooks any way except through your publisher's
resellers.
If sites spring up to
resell ebooks with no licensing limits, they could duplicate and sell as many copies as they want.
In my view,
ebooks should be configured in some way such that they can not be copied and «
resold».
Authors do not need help in getting dead trees to
resellers, because many people are buying
eBooks and because CreateSpace and Lightning Source can get books to
resellers in a week.
If you want to sell a printed book, or an
ebook in any other online -
reseller platform, however, you need to buy at least one ISBN.
Perhaps the most exciting aspect of this new security system is a viable platform in which
eBooks can be
resold.
On XinXii, spam
ebooks are strictly excluded by our terms and conditions, and PLR
ebooks and
ebooks with
reseller rights are not tolerated in our store.
when the price of an
ebook is within 10 % of the price of a real physical book THAT I WILL ALWAYS OWN AND CAN
RESELL, ebboks will be very slow sellers.
«From the first day we also had been confronted with the early appearences of spam
ebooks in the form of
reseller books.
The publishing industry gathered together some time ago to enable a robust standard, called ONIX, that can provide remarkably rich data about each
ebook but the industry and
resellers has not gotten fully behind the standard.
Just buy an
ebooks with
resell rights and
resell it for profit!
Macmillan wants dictate
ebook prices for end customers (in other words, no discounting by
resellers) and will treat its
resellers as «agents» who get a fixed 30 % of the sale.
Assessing
ebook sales figures is a challenge mainly because Amazon, the largest U.S.
reseller, doesn't provide market data (beyond sweepingly broad statements).
And most large publishers allow you to
reseller their
eBooks if you have Adobe Content Server 4 deployed as your DRM solution.
To the contrary, you can't
resell an
eBook (at least not yet)-- digital rights management makes it so, and the entire publishing value chain should consider DRM its friend.
by Tom Hua which includes top quality
ebooks that you can read,
resell or give away to others.
Starting January 31st the entire Google
eBooks catalog, will be removed from all
reseller sites, but existing customers can access their past purchases from their Google account or the IndieBound Reader software.
Even if
resellers or bookstores sell books with the new DRM, customers with an old RMSDK 9 based reader (the old Jetbook Lite) can still purchase, download and read these
ebooks.
To say the least, we are very disappointed in Google's decision, but, we have every confidence that, long before Google's
reseller program is discontinued, ABA will be able to offer IndieCommerce users a new alternative e-book product, or choice of products, that will not only replace Google
eBooks as it currently works on IndieCommerce sites but that will be in many ways a better product.
In the meantime, Google will take the energy it used to spend on letting small bookstores sell
ebooks and transfer that to trying to build Google Play into the
ebook powerhouse it had hoped to become when it first launched the affiliates
reseller program.
And there is also fact that licences of
ebooks can be depleted -
resellers have time limited license or have finite amount of copies they can sell.
The key selling points of the Sony DRM are; to make
eBook rentals viable, to lend an
eBook to a friend easier, to define a clear path of ownership, better pay per chapter (metered) support and the ability to
resell a book.
You can't
resell an
ebook at the moment.
They are, IMO, too expensive for an
ebook I can't
resell and don't really own.
I think this is attempt by the
ebook distributors to keep readers in their company's particular sandbox (think Apple — which also makes it impossible for people download
ebook files outside of the IBook environment) and I think it's also driven by the fact that distributors want to be able to track what people are reading for their market research (and to
resell that research to other companies).
They can only
resell ebooks bought within Amazon, so what is being sold will likely be equivalent to the current
ebook version, just with a different monetary allocation.
January 7th is the final date current
resellers need to bear in mind, so there is no interruption in the ability to sell
ebooks.