TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Accusing Amazon of Antitrust Violations, Authors and Booksellers Demand Inquiry

3 pointsby jakewalkeralmost 10 years ago

1 comment

higherpurposealmost 10 years ago
&gt; The company, based in Seattle, now sells more than a third of new print books, a level no single bookseller has ever reached before, and it closely controls the dominant e-book platform. Some publishers said Amazon was responsible for 85 percent of their nonlibrary digital sales.<p>THAT&#x27;S the real issue. Stop wasting time with the <i>&quot;Boohoo Amazon is disrupting us with ebooks when we wanted to keep selling paper books!&quot;</i> argument or even the <i>&quot;but we really wanted to sell the ebooks for $13 rather than only $10!&quot;</i> argument. The latter has already been lost in the Apple anti-trust case, and the former is lost as well - nobody really wants to live in the paper-book past anymore.<p>What they need to ensure is that readers can take their Amazon ebooks anywhere they want (DRM-free). For instance, they should be <i>legally</i> allowed to take their whole library of hundreds of ebooks and move it to Google Play Books or Apple Books or B&amp;N Books and so on (whether this is technically possible already is besides the point).<p>Readers shouldn&#x27;t feel <i>trapped</i> on a platform to the point where they think they can&#x27;t leave Amazon because &quot;all of their books are there&quot;.<p>Fight for this and the book readers will also be on your side and against Amazon. The last time most of them weren&#x27;t because you tried to sell them the &quot;more expensive books are good for you!&quot; argument, and they didn&#x27;t buy it (rightly so).