Help navigation
News
-
RELATED STORIES
-
OFT clears OUP-Nelson Thornes acquisition
The Office of Fair Trading ...
-
Blackwell’s plans expansion this year
Blackwell’s plans to ...
-
Digital disruption ‘speeding up’
Publishers have no grounds ...
-
Independents flock to NBT’s e-book shop
More than 130 independent b...
-
Nelson Thornes looks to iPad for GCSE material
Nelson Thornes is to launch...
Duncan Baird to remove DRM
03.05.12 | Lisa Campbell
Duncan Baird Publishers is to remove digital rights management (DRM) from its future and backlist titles, in order to put readers “at the heart” of its focus.
The UK publisher of illustrated books in the fields of mind, body and spirit and cookery said it took the decision to remove DRM from 150 of its titles and 80 of its future titles so that readers were not restricted as to which e-reader they could read the books from.
Chairman Duncan Baird, said: “It's your book—you bought it! We believe in that so much, we are removing the DRM from our books. This allows readers the freedom to enjoy our book on any reader, or on any platform, they choose.”
The company’s marketing director and head of digital Vicky Hartley said the move was one of a number of new innovations in its digital offering the company was working on.
“This is part of our ongoing efforts to connect with our readers and have more of an authentic relationship with them,” she said.
Duncan Baird is writing to authors to tell them of its decision, which has met with mixed response. “There are some authors who are obviously scared about digital piracy and we have to prove to our authors that the fact is DRM is a poor deterrent and anyone who wants to can scan in and use it as a PDF file if they want to,” Hartley said.
“Those authors who are more digital savvy are more understanding. Once we explain we are putting readers first, authors are more persuaded.”
Hartley added that: "It gives us the opportunity to work with smaller retailers in niche areas in the ways before we could not."
The managing director of e-book vendor Anobii, Matteo Berlucchi, has been campaigning for publishers to remove the DRM on books to allow other vendors to compete with Amazon. He has branded DRM “expensive” and “ineffective”.
Last week, UK science fiction publisher Tor followed its US counterpart by taking the DRM off its e-book titles.



Comments: Scroll down for the latest comments and to have your say
By posting on this website you agree to the Bookseller comments policy. Comments go direct to live please be relevant, brief and definitely not abusive. Report any "unsuitable comments by clicking the links"
Sort: Oldest first | Newest first | Readers' most recommended
This is fantastic news. It represents more publishers seeing through the issues of DRM and recognising the essential incompatibility between DRM and a customer-focus. I've added this link to my blog post on the topic at http://karldrinkwater.blogspot.com/2012/05/e-book-lending-and-libraries.... and encouraged people to support the publishers who are taking this far-sighted approach.
This is fantastic news. It represents more publishers seeing through the issues of DRM and recognising the essential incompatibility between DRM and a customer-focus. I've added this link to my blog post on the topic at http://karldrinkwater.blogspot.com/2012/05/e-book-lending-and-libraries.... and encouraged people to support the publishers who are taking this far-sighted approach.