> Your public library and services like Overdrive are "NetFlix for text".
They're NetFlix for books and formal periodical publications, both of which are more movie-like: there are a relatively small number of publishers and publishing a full-length book is a substantial, multi-person project, as is publishing a magazine or newspaper. There's a huge wealth of text out there that has no chance of ever hitting any library or central seller/distributor of etexts.
Judging by the stuff that comes up when you browse categories, or when NetFlix wants to suggest something to you, the only "curation" involved is whether they were able to get rights to display the content. There's no quality standard, and there's no logical standard (like "if we offer the second film in this series, maybe we should offer the first one too") either.
You've clearly never been to my local public library - this is often how things are there - second and fourth book in a four book series there, first and third nowhere to be found.
In the case of a library, I would tend to suspect one of these scenarios:
- The first and third book are currently checked out.
- The library acquired all four books, but the first and third have been destroyed / lost / stolen by customers.
- The library didn't acquire any of the books, but the second and fourth were donated and the library chose to absorb them rather than selling or destroying them.
None of those are even conceptually applicable to NetFlix. I definitely would not expect
- The library has a limited budget, and considered that it would be better spent buying the second book than the first book.
Note that NetFlix's inventory of physical discs doesn't suffer from the same problems that its streaming inventory does. That is (most likely) because it's trivial to obtain the legal right to distribute the physical discs -- you just buy them on the open market, the same way a library does with its books. NetFlix's streaming inventory isn't "curated", it's not under NetFlix's control at all.
They're NetFlix for books and formal periodical publications, both of which are more movie-like: there are a relatively small number of publishers and publishing a full-length book is a substantial, multi-person project, as is publishing a magazine or newspaper. There's a huge wealth of text out there that has no chance of ever hitting any library or central seller/distributor of etexts.