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Writers under internet threat
Book piracy on the internet will ultimately drive authors to stop writing unless radical methods are devised to compensate them for lost sales. This is the stark forecast of the Society of Authors, as reported in the Times.
Author Tracy Chevalier, who chairs the organisation, said that her members were deeply concerned that the publishing industry was failing to adapt to the digital age. Chevalier told The Times that the century-old model by which authors are paid – a mixture of cash advances and royalties – was finished. "It is a dam that's cracking," she said. "We are trying to plug the holes with legislation and litigation but we need to think radically. We have to evolve and create a very different pay system, possibly by making the content available free to all and finding a way to get paid separately.”"
Comments on this article
By Richard
"...will ultimately drive authors to stop writing..." That's a ludicrous statement and an echo of how the music industry felt about the internet before they realised that in fact they can squeeze even more money from the music buying public. If anything the internet will level the playing field and allow readers to get at more (quality) writing that is 'filtered' off the shelves by a manipulative group of high powered yet poorly informed executives.31 Mar 08 10:44
By Tobias Gould
Big music bands welcome free downloads as they get income from gigs. I can't see how there can be a new income stream for authors if they let their content be available online for free. Audio book could be sold per download. Myspace authors provide links to free bits of content and links to amazon to buy the book. Pay per download for text as well could solve it but only if it is not free elsewhere.31 Mar 08 12:05
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