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Book Piracy BAD

A. E. Lowan

Forum Mom
Leadership
Mr. Grumpy Pants is back with a good discussion on book piracy and a story Maggie Stiefvater told about 10 years ago on Tumblr but is still quite relevant today. Muchly grumping, some cussing. NSFW

 
It's an interesting discussion. For starters, let me say that I think book piracy is bad and hard to justify. Ebooks are cheap. There are plenty that are free and many others between 0,99 and 4,99. They're available everywhere in any format you desire. There is no reason to pirate a book. It's just digital shoplifting at the expense of an author who already earns very little as it is.

This doesn't make this guy's story more than an interesting anecdote though. I'm sure that if you search, you can find authors saying the exact opposite, where pirated copies helped them sell more at some point. It also matters that this is about a later book in a serries, where people had already read the first couple and were eager for the next. And that is was 14 years ago, which is an eternity in digital publishing. Kindle unlimited only launched in 2014 (if Google informs me correctly), with author payout going from $2.5 million to $50 million.

Doesn't mean that this specific author for this specific series didn't suffer from piracy. Just that if published today it may have been different. Or that she may in the long run have benefited, or that for a first in series book, it wouldn't have mattered at all.

Piracy is bad. But it's not something you have much control over as an author or should worry about. Except if you're in Kindle Unlimited, in which case Amazon doesn't like seeing your books list elsewhere and you should actively at least make a show of getting them removed.
 

xena

Sage
Book piracy is one of those topics that never seems to go away and probably never will. I get why readers sometimes turn to pirated copies, especially when books are unavailable or unaffordable in their region, but at the end of the day it can have a real impact on authors. Particularly indie and smaller authors who rely on those sales. It's definitely a more nuanced discussion than people often make it out to be
 

Insolent Lad

Archmage
I finally chose to ignore piracy of my books altogether and followed Cory Doctorow's example of giving away the ebooks. If nothing else, it simplified my life.
 

pmmg

Myth Weaver
I dont see any other recourse than to ignore piracy, its juts too prevalent to be on top of it all.

I'd like to say that its sad. We all have choices in our lives, and some choose to be low lives. What can you do? I'd like the world to be better but its not.
 

pmmg

Myth Weaver
I wonder if flooding the piracy sites with your own pirate copies would be just as effective today.
 

Mad Swede

Auror
I think this depends on how you publish. Self-published authors are probably in a significantly worse position than those of us with publishing contracts, in that they get to make the choice between trying to nail the pirates or ignoring them (either by giving away e-books or by just not dealing with the pirates). Those of us with publishing contracts have a publisher to back us up, and in my case that means a legal department who can be spectacularly unpleasant when dealing with pirates - about the only thing they don't do is send people round with baseball bats.

I also think this depends on what language you're publishing in. If you write in English then the chances of your book being pirated are probably significantly higher than if you write in a (relative) minority langauge like Swedish.
 
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