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I remember when "Under the Dome" was selling wholesale (Hardcover) for $13 and I ended up buying it from Walmart for $6.99 - because (A) it was $3.00 less than the eBook, and (B), well, I then could, in theory, resell the book. It's odd watching two book sellers compete with each other to sell a book at loss. But, your comment, "Amazon would let publishers rip them off in this way - paying more for something that costs less to produce." brings to mind Scalzi's comment, http://whatever.scalzi.com/2014/07/30/amazons-latest-volley/ "(This is where many people decide to opine that the cost of eBooks should reflect the cost of production in some way that allows them to say that whatever price point they prefer is the naturally correct one. This is where I say: You know what, if you’ve ever paid more than twenty cents for a soda at a fast food restaurant, or have ever bought bottled water at a store, then I feel perfectly justified in considering your cost of production position vis a vis publishing as entirely hypocritical. Please stop making the cost of production argument for books and apparently nothing else in your daily consumer life. I think less of you when you do.)" Think about the software that I purchase online that costs $0.001 to deliver and I pay $595 - it costs 1/10,000th what the old version with paper books, and CDs, and nice glossy boxes. I agree with Scalzi - the argument about "it costs less to produce" is bogus. Something should be worth whatever value it has to the person buying it intersecting with whatever price the person willing to sell it wants, plain and simple. The cost of creation is not particularly interesting. |
Er, what? The software doesn't cost $0.001 to produce.
This is more akin to being able to buy that software in a Staples store for $595 in a box with a DVD and manual. Then the producer starts selling it online for $650, because after all you no longer have to go to the store. They just refuse to cut the consumer in on the savings of not producing boxes, not producing media, not creating manuals and instead only focus on the added utility.
When you're dealing in cultural arts and informational products that can benefit society and instead of allowing the benefit of new technology to enrich you further and enrich society more you instead steal the whole benefit for yourself that's evil.
In terms of Scalzi's example: Yes a soda that's sold for $2 in a can might cost 20c to produce, fine no problem. But then recycling takes off and tech develops and that can now costs 12c less to produce so you put the price up to $3 because you're using more recycled material and that's now a selling point. That's what's wrong here. You already had more profit by selling at the same price point, the move in tech and society created the benefit and you leached it and cynically did one over on your customers because you knew that their desire to improve the world could allow you to get a better price.