Australian government may also sue Apple over e-book pricing

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  • Reply 41 of 64
    hill60hill60 Posts: 6,992member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gatorguy View Post


    In another thread much earlier today I pointed out to you that particular book was self-published and not from one of the 5 publishers accused of price-fixing. 50 Shades can be sold for whatever the retailer wishes. Of course that doesn't mean you can't continue making believe it's proof that the price-fixing never occurred. Wouldn't it more honest of you to find one from one of the accused publisher's if you think you have proof that no prices have been fixed?



    Actually it's from the one of the "big six", why they aren't part of this is a mystery and the book I selected is from the current NYT best sellers list.



    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_House



    Perhaps you'd like to refute my link showing eBooks from a major publishing house, who obviously agreed to Apple's terms (as evidenced by the fact their books are available in iBooks) with anything at all comparing real world pricing between Amazon and Apple?



    What it does show is publishers are free to set their own price and that is indeterminate of Apple.
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  • Reply 42 of 64
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,727member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by hill60 View Post


    Actually it's from the largest of the "big six", why they aren't part of this is a mystery and the book I selected is from the current NYT best sellers list.



    Perhaps you'd like to refute my link showing eBooks from a major publishing house, who obviously agreed to Apple's terms (as evidenced by the fact their books are available in iBooks) with anything at all comparing real world pricing between Amazon and Apple?



    What it does show is publishers are free to set their own price and that is indeterminate of Apple.



    You have absolutely shown proof that if the other 5 largest publisher's did not set the minimum advertised price then price competition will happen and lower pricing can be used to attract customers. Thank you.
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  • Reply 43 of 64
    hill60hill60 Posts: 6,992member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by jukes View Post


    Maybe. On the other hand, the price of my Kindle e-books have risen by 30-50% since Apple entered the market, so it seems more plausible that this will reduce product prices over time.



    Do you have some empirical data to prove this claim or are you just making stuff up, hazarding a guess, making an estimate?
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  • Reply 44 of 64
    hill60hill60 Posts: 6,992member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iSheldon View Post


    Colluding with providers of goods by price fixing is legal now? Say wha?



    The presumption of innocence is not legal anymore, say wha?
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  • Reply 45 of 64
    nasseraenasserae Posts: 3,167member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iSheldon View Post


    Dude- quotation marks mean just that- I'm quoting something. It has been said over and over on here that that is what Apple did. I never said Apple said.....



    Who said they ONLY did it to save the industry? Steve Jobs said many times that he convinced the labels to sell songs for $0.99 in iTunes by arguing that this will help Apple sells more iPods and help the labels fight piracy. This is not a secrete Apple agenda.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iSheldon View Post


    So you'll defend greedy publishers but not greedy music producers all on Apple's behalf. Nice.



    Where did I defend the publishers? I am not against nor with the publishers. However, I am strongly with the idea that copyright holders have the right to set their copyrighted material prices. The market should decide whether or not their prices are high.
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  • Reply 46 of 64
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by hill60 View Post


    Actually it's from the one of the "big six", why they aren't part of this is a mystery and the book I selected is from the current NYT best sellers list.



    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_House



    Perhaps you'd like to refute my link showing eBooks from a major publishing house, who obviously agreed to Apple's terms (as evidenced by the fact their books are available in iBooks) with anything at all comparing real world pricing between Amazon and Apple?



    What it does show is publishers are free to set their own price and that is indeterminate of Apple.



    Random House isn't one of the 5 publishers that are part of the alleged price fixing scheme.
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  • Reply 47 of 64
    hill60hill60 Posts: 6,992member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by gradam01 View Post


    Random House isn't one of the 5 publishers that are part of the alleged price fixing scheme.



    Yet they sell iBooks, including best sellers at the same price as Amazon which shows that price has nothing whatsoever to do with Apple.



    Apple merely set up a competitive marketplace.



    Apple also have the right to be presumed innocent in spite of the DoJ witch hunt.
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  • Reply 48 of 64
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,727member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by hill60 View Post


    Yet they sell iBooks, including best sellers at the same price as Amazon which shows that price has nothing whatsoever to do with Apple.



    Apple merely set up a competitive marketplace.



    Apple also have the right to be presumed innocent in spite of the DoJ witch hunt.



    Hill60, read this summation starting with "It dropped that terrible idea quickly", about midway down the page. It explains it much better than I can and uses the DoJ document itself for clarification. I suspect you've just misunderstood what the claims are.

    http://www.businessinsider.com/doj-l...ks-2012-4?op=1
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  • Reply 49 of 64
    isheldonisheldon Posts: 570member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by NasserAE View Post


    Where did I defend the publishers? I am not against nor with the publishers. However, I am strongly with the idea that copyright holders have the right to set their copyrighted material prices. The market should decide whether or not their prices are high.



    Ok- so now you'll defend copyright holders in publishing but not recording artists who also have want to set their own prices which Apple will not allow? I suppose they don't have the right to set their own prices too?

    Keep digging.......
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  • Reply 50 of 64
    nasseraenasserae Posts: 3,167member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iSheldon View Post


    Ok- so now you'll defend copyright holders in publishing but not recording artists who also have want to set their own prices which Apple will not allow? I suppose they don't have the right to set their own prices too?

    Keep digging.......



    Again, where did I say I am against the music artist setting their price? No one is stopping them from increasing their prices. Actually, they already did increase their prices by %30. The TV shows increased their prices as well. It seems you have been living in a cave for the last 5 years. It's free market.



    I am not going to waste more time replying to your posts because you clearly have a habit of accusing people of saying things they didn't say. Keep talking to yourself from now on.
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  • Reply 51 of 64
    dunksdunks Posts: 1,254member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by I am a Zither Zather Zuzz View Post


    Apple should show them it means business and pull out of Australia completely. Apple wouldn't hardly feel any pain, but the Aussies would learn a hard lesson: Don't fuck with Apple!



    You really are just an angry human being aren't you?



    The US may have a bigger apendage (Florida) but at least ours (Cape York) can still get it up.
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  • Reply 52 of 64
    dunksdunks Posts: 1,254member
    The only ebook I've purchased is Steve's Jobs biography which was $10 on the iBook Store even though it was $17 on the Kindle Store. I still see physical copies priced at $45.
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  • Reply 53 of 64
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by enjourni View Post


    Wow aussie government really seems to hate apple lol.



    Its because Microsoft influences the Australian Government. You can't sneeze in government in Australian unless you first ask Microsoft for permission. Thats why the Australian and State governments pay huge licensing fees to Microsoft for products that they could get for free or substantially lower price elsewhere - " Libre Office, iWork, MySQL" bet your life you couldn't, a Microsoft rep would be at your door threatening your career. This is why there is soo much Apple hate its the Microsoft puppet masters! - Good to see me getting value for my hard earned tax dollars!!!!!
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  • Reply 54 of 64
    I have two concerns about all this. First, why should retailers be allowed to compete with each other on price when they add absolutely zero value to the product created by the author of an eBook? Second, if the DoJ (and Amazon) are successful in their attack on the Agency Model, what does that mean for authors of eBooks who use software like iBooks Author to sell eBooks completely independently of established book publishers?



    I am strongly in favour of removing as many of the steps that separate authors from readers as is possible, and that includes traditional book publishers, wholesalers and retailers who all make profits from the work of authors. And if Apple has helped clear away some of the parasitic pricing that goes on in between author and reader, then that is a fantastic thing, and the DoJ, Amazon and the whole book publishing/distribution industry can go and get stuffed.



    There are far, far too many businesses that make 'parasitic' profits simply by being 'middle men' is the link between the producer of goods ( in this case authors) and the consumers of goods (in this case readers).



    So, go Apple! Fight the bastards on behalf of all authors and their readers.
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  • Reply 55 of 64
    hill60hill60 Posts: 6,992member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Kormoran View Post


    Its because Microsoft influences the Australian Government. You can't sneeze in government in Australian unless you first ask Microsoft for permission. Thats why the Australian and State governments pay huge licensing fees to Microsoft for products that they could get for free or substantially lower price elsewhere - " Libre Office, iWork, MySQL" bet your life you couldn't, a Microsoft rep would be at your door threatening your career. This is why there is soo much Apple hate its the Microsoft puppet masters! - Good to see me getting value for my hard earned tax dollars!!!!!



    Our Tax office doesn't even work with Macs, no elodgement for YOU!



    Maybe the ACCC should look into why the tax office requires the use of Windows in order to lodge an electronic tax return.
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  • Reply 56 of 64
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Kormoran View Post


    Its because Microsoft influences the Australian Government. You can't sneeze in government in Australian unless you first ask Microsoft for permission. Thats why the Australian and State governments pay huge licensing fees to Microsoft for products that they could get for free or substantially lower price elsewhere - " Libre Office, iWork, MySQL" bet your life you couldn't, a Microsoft rep would be at your door threatening your career. This is why there is soo much Apple hate its the Microsoft puppet masters! - Good to see me getting value for my hard earned tax dollars!!!!!



    Yes. The outright antagonism to Apple products in the IT departments of Australian government agencies and businesses is astounding and has been going on for decades now. I suggest that this is simply because if Microsoft platforms were removed from IT departments, IT managers who have to cut their support staff and expenditure budgets in half, and staff who have to use Wintel computers would be more productive and less frustrated by cheap and crappy computers - and that just wouldn't do, would it!



    It is way, way past time that Australian CEOs woke up to the Microsoft-inspired FUD that comes out of their IT Departments and told them to get into the 21st Century.
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  • Reply 57 of 64
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by I am a Zither Zather Zuzz View Post


    Apple should show them it means business and pull out of Australia completely. Apple wouldn't hardly feel any pain, but the Aussies would learn a hard lesson: Don't fuck with Apple!



    Stupidest post ever....
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  • Reply 58 of 64
    dasanman69dasanman69 Posts: 13,002member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by SolipsismX View Post


    Apple was never going to get away with a perfectly legal agency model?



    The agency model in itself isn't the problem, its when you collude with others to force another to use it.
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  • Reply 59 of 64
    dasanman69dasanman69 Posts: 13,002member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by pauldfullerton View Post


    I have two concerns about all this. First, why should retailers be allowed to compete with each other on price when they add absolutely zero value to the product created by the author of an eBook? Second, if the DoJ (and Amazon) are successful in their attack on the Agency Model, what does that mean for authors of eBooks who use software like iBooks Author to sell eBooks completely independently of established book publishers?



    I am strongly in favour of removing as many of the steps that separate authors from readers as is possible, and that includes traditional book publishers, wholesalers and retailers who all make profits from the work of authors. And if Apple has helped clear away some of the parasitic pricing that goes on in between author and reader, then that is a fantastic thing, and the DoJ, Amazon and the whole book publishing/distribution industry can go and get stuffed.



    There are far, far too many businesses that make 'parasitic' profits simply by being 'middle men' is the link between the producer of goods ( in this case authors) and the consumers of goods (in this case readers).



    So, go Apple! Fight the bastards on behalf of all authors and their readers.



    What nonsense, the same can be said about just about every other product and retailer out there. Using your logic nothing should ever be on sale because the retailer didn't nothing to create the product. Asinine at its greatest.
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  • Reply 60 of 64
    chris_cachris_ca Posts: 2,543member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iSheldon View Post


    Right- just like Steve Jobs and Apple treatened the music industry with $0.99 songs in order to sell more iPods while insisting it was doing so only to "save" the music industry from pirates.



    Where did you read this?
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