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thinking 'bout ebook publishing
10 hours ago ago from it's all one thing
NOTE: Updated this to include mkay's comment for greater clarity: At Making Light, mkay wrote : I had a realization the other day as I pounded off a mini-rant about the flaws in ebook proponent arguments: Someone Was Wrong On The Internet. I have come to the conclusion that anyone announcing the death of print publishing who writes one of the following: • An idle mention of financial interest in the success of ebooks (via job or ...
Related contentPublishers Tell Google and Their Ebook Plans to Get Bent [Rumor]
12 hours ago ago from RandomStuffs.net
The vision of ebooks Google has presented to publishers: allowing people to print copies, cut and paste portions, and paying publishers 63 percent of the revenue. The vision the publishers presented in return: Go eff yourself . Continue reading here: Publishers Tell Google and Their Ebook Plans to Get Bent [Rumor]
Related contentOur approach to maximizing advertising revenue for online publishers
6 hours ago ago from The Official Google Blog
Our approach to maximizing advertising revenue for online publishers 2/09/2010 05:30:00 AM All website owners need to pay for the costs of creating content and making it available online. Whether delivering entertainment, products, news, services, social networking or opinions, they need to pay their way by selling advertising or charging their users. Website owners, or "online publishers," span the range from individual bloggers to ...
Related contentPirates of the High E-s
18 hours ago ago from I Love My Kindle
Arrhhhh! Okay, now that we have that out of the way, let's talk about piracy. E-book piracy, that is. It's been in the news a lot. Supposedly, fear of pirates is driving some publishers to make all kinds of decisions. First, some people didn't want to make e-books at all, for fear of pirates. Then, they think releasing e-books on the same day as the hardback increases piracy. I think it's time we slow down on ...
Related contentFrom Ken Doctor’s “Newsonomics”: How paidContent found its niche
2 hours ago ago from Nieman Journalism Lab
[Here's another excerpt from Ken Doctor 's new book, Newsonomics: Twelve New Trends That Will Shape the News You Get . Today, Ken's Q&A with Rafat Ali, who runs media-world must-read paidContent . —Josh] Rafat Ali is founder, publisher and editor of ContentNext Media . Reuters described its success well: ContentNext's flagship paidContent, founded in 2002, has quickly established itself as a must-read among executives in the media and ...
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