Bookish Rant: Apple, Amazon, Anti-Trust and the DOJ

Filed in Bookish Rant or Raves , featured , The Rocket Lover Posted on September 6, 2012 @ 12:00 pm 8 comments

I was at Dragon*Con over Labor Day weekend. For those either not in the U.S., or who aren’t familiar with Science Fiction Fandom, two explanations are in order. Labor Day weekend is the first weekend in September.

Dragon*Con is a huge regional science fiction convention in downtown Atlanta, Georgia. When I say huge, I mean attendance that numbers well over 30,000. Downtown Atlanta looks like it’s been overrun by aliens.

30,000 plus people talk about a LOT of stuff. Some of it frivolous, but a lot of it book-related. I listened to/met/shook hands with some of my favorite authors.

On Sunday morning, among about a dozen other panels, two lawyers and an author tackled the seriously bookish topic of the “Apple eBooks Lawsuit”. The room was packed to the rafters.

If you are looking for a basic but excellent primer on the entire price fixing lawsuit that the U.S. Department of Justice filed against Apple and five of the big six publishers (Hachette, HarperCollins, Macmillan, Simon & Schuster and Penguin), you can’t do better than this excellent summary at Dear Author. Jane Little is a lawyer and she has not only summarized the original case beautifully, but she’s continued to cover the whole farrago as it’s kept on morphing.

Back to the panel at Dragon*Con. The lawyer who discussed the case was an anti-trust specialist, and she went into the case by talking about U.S. anti-trust law. Her take on the whole thing was pretty clear. The law is that competitors in a particular market, in this case Hachette, HarperCollins, etc., and Apple, cannot legally get together and talk about prices, whether they actually set prices or not. But in this case they did set prices, making the whole thing worse for them from a legal standpoint.

There is no provision in the law for a “greater good” being served. Also, as romance author Courtney Milan so eloquently wrote in her blog recently, there is no exemption from anti-trust law for being a special snowflake. Just read her post titled Your Unspecial Anti-Trust Snowflake. It’s a nutshell takedown of all the objections by all the defendants in one easy-to-read gulp.

But what fascinated me was the perspective of the author on the panel, who shall remain nameless (yes, I do remember who it was). Her contention was that Amazon needs to be stopped, now, for the things they will do, later, when they achieve even greater power in the market.

Amazon has a tremendous amount of power in the ebook and also the book marketplace. Because they are successful. Jeff Bezos didn’t listen when everyone laughed at him a number of years ago. When everyone said that people wouldn’t buy books (and other stuff) online. When everyone said that people wouldn’t read ebooks. We all know now how both those predictions turned out. But Amazon could have failed. Amazon has reaped the rewards of betting on what was absolutely not a sure thing.

Now Amazon has a giant share of print book distribution, and a dominant share of ebook distribution. Recent statistics show that we’ve reached the tipping point on ebooks. Ebooks are now THE dominant sales format for adult fiction; bigger than hardcover, bigger than paperback. Amazon is also a publisher.

The argument was that the publishers all behaved so badly, even illegally, in order to prevent Amazon from doing something even more terrible with all that power.

Of course, what the publishers did with that power in the short run was break Amazon’s stranglehold on ebook prices, and the immediate effect was that ebook prices rose.  Consumers did not benefit from those higher prices.

What stuck with me was that the arguments to do something about Amazon now were based on something they might do in the future.

We don’t know what they might do in the future. Amazon is a very powerful company right now. (So, for that matter, is Apple!) But asking the government, any government, to punish a company, or an individual, for what they might do is always a bad precedent.

Amazon might do good things. They might do bad things. They might get fat, dumb and happy. Microsoft used to be feared for how big and near-monopolistic they were, and look where they are now. New disruptive technologies will come along, and Amazon might be too happy with their status quo to jump on the new bandwagon (which is a lot of what is going on with the big six publishers right now).

But laws punish acts, not thoughts. What we do, not what others believe we might do. Let’s not even think of going there. Oh wait, somebody already did. His name was George Orwell, and his book about the Thought Police is so famous that Apple used it in one of their most famous commercials. That’s right. 1984.

Ironic that, wouldn’t you say?

About Marlene


Marlene is a librarian, ebook advocate, science fiction fan, and RPG fan who lives in the Atlanta suburbs. She and her husband are owned by four cats, just ask them. She's a geek and a nerd and proud of it. She's also an avid reader of everything, including the back of the cereal box, and has been blogging since April 2011 at Reading Reality and is a reviewer at Library Journal as well as active on Goodreads. She is also the publisher of Ebook Review Central.

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8 Comments

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  • JenM September 6, 2012 at 3:05 pm

    Is Amazon working for the consumer? Hell no. They are purely profit driven. However, at this point in time, their goals happen to align with mine, so I benefit and therefore, I’m cheering them on. The publishers have no one to blame but themselves for their current mess. If they really want to defeat Amazon, they have to start issuing their ebooks without DRM or geographical restrictions. That would open up the market and would eliminate the need for ebook readers to be tied to one particular bookstore. However, they are too afraid to do this. They don’t seem to understand that with their current policies, they are going to lose. They need bold action, not this price fixing nonsense which is a just a red herring that distracts them from the real game.

  • Nadia Lee September 7, 2012 at 4:30 am

    I’m not too sympathetic either. I can see why they feel angry, but price fixing is not the way to go.

  • aurian September 7, 2012 at 1:58 pm

    Great post, but I do want a recap of DragonCon without the politics! Who did you meet, what books did you get?

    • Marlene September 8, 2012 at 5:52 pm

      Too many books, too many panels, too many people, too little time. It turned out to be 50,000 aliens. Met, or listened to Grant Imahara, Bruce Boxleitner, R.A. Salvatore, Mercedes, Lackey, Katherine Kurtz, James R. Tuck, Kevin A. Anderson, D.B Jackson, Delilah Dawson. For the books I picked up, see my Stacking the Shelves post over at Reading Reality (www.readingreality.net)
      And I still wished I was at WorldCon.
      Dragon*Con was so huge we missed 2 of the 3 Hucksters’ Rooms!

  • draconismoi September 7, 2012 at 8:26 pm

    Hahah! Some people who are opposing the settlement were a wee bit upset a page limits on their oppositions. So this lawyer filed a cartoon instead of a pleading.

    http://www.abajournal.com/files/AppleAmicusBrief.pdf

    The act is clearly funnier than the comic. And the so-called “accessibility” of the comic itself pretty much operates on the “special snowflake” theory that Courtney eviscerated so eloquently.

  • Susan September 7, 2012 at 8:57 pm

    Very nice post, Marlene. I’ve been following this on DA for awhile and have been unmoved by some people’s position that it is OK to break Federal laws to thwart the evil Amazon. Sounds pretty vigilante to me. Also, let’s be honest here. All of the companies involved are interested in one thing only: making money. They aren’t out to preserve the written word, the mighty tome, great literature, civilization as we know it, whatever. That’s just a smokescreen. They’re businesses, plain and simple. The difference is that Amazon conducted their business with the legal framework and the publishers (and Apple) didn’t. End of story. Pay the piper. And, in the future, have a business model that emphasizes innovation, customer service, and long-range planning rather than illegal collusion.

    I’d love to know who that author was. So I’d know not to buy one of his/her books. Idiot.

    • Marlene September 8, 2012 at 6:09 pm

      Thanks, Susan!

      Weren’t we all taught in kindergarten that two wrongs don’t make a right?
      The named publishers broke the law. It may have seemed easier or simpler to fix prices than to change the way they have been doing business for lo these many years, even though the universe of bookselling has changed completely in the last decade. This was a quick fix that turned out to be neither.

      The internet has moved everyone’s cheese. Now the publishers need to learn to either be more efficient mice, the way that Amazon did, or they’ll discover that the maze has been re-designed so that they can’t find any food sources at all.

      If you’re really curious, the pocket program for Dragon*Con is available online at dragoncon.org. Just look for the Sunday morning panel titled Apple Ebooks Lawsuit

  • […] Back to the question of the cost of an ebook. The price to an individual, meaning you and me, is what the seller (Amazon, B&N, Book Depository, etc.) says it is. Because that’s the arrangement that those suppliers have made with the publishers. You remember the publishers, and that little anti-trust lawsuit problem they have with the U.S. Government about, you guessed it, the price of ebooks? (If not, see this Bookish Rant) […]

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