The Future of Electronic Publishing
UNESCO's somewhat arbitrary definition of "book" is:
"Non-periodical printed publication of at least 49 pages excluding covers."
The emergence of electronic publishing was supposed to change all that. Yet
a bloodbath of unusual proportions has taken place in the last few months.
Time Warner's iPublish and MightyWords (partly owned by Barnes and Noble)
were the last in a string of resounding failures which cast in doubt the
business model underlying digital content. Everything seemed to have gone
wrong: the dot.coms dot bombed, venture capital dried up, competing
standards fractured an already fragile marketplace, the hardware (e-book
readers) was clunky and awkward, the software unwieldy, the e-books badly
written or already in the public domain.
Terrified by the inexorable process of disintermediation (the establishment
of direct contact between author and readers, excluding publishers and
bookstores) and by the ease with which digital content can be replicated -
publishers resorted to draconian copyright protection measures
(euphemistically known as "digital rights management"). This further
alienated the few potential readers left. The opposite model of "viral" or
"buzz" marketing (by encouraging the dissemination of free copies of the
promoted book) was only marginally more successful.
Moreover, e-publishing's delivery platform, the Internet, has been
transformed beyond recognition since March 2000.
From an open, somewhat anarchic, web of networked computers - it has evolved
into a territorial, commercial, corporate extension of "brick and mortar"
giants, subject to government regulation. It is less friendly towards
independent (small) publishers, the backbone of e-publishing. Increasingly,
it is expropriated by publishing and media behemoths. It is treated as a
medium for cross promotion, supply chain management, and customer relations
management. It offers only some minor synergies with non-cyberspace, real
world, franchises and media properties. The likes of Disney and Bertelsmann
have swung a full circle from considering the Internet to be the next big
thing in New Media delivery - to frantic efforts to contain the red ink it
oozed all over their otherwise impeccable balance sheets.
But were the now silent pundits right all the same? Is the future of
publishing (and other media industries) inextricably intertwined with the
Internet?
The answer depends on whether an old habit dies hard. Internet surfers are
used to free content. They are very reluctant to pay for information (with
precious few exceptions, like the "Wall Street Journal"'s electronic
edition). Moreover, the Internet, with 3 billion pages listed in the Google
search engine (and another 15 billion in "invisible" databases), provides
many free substitutes to every information product, no matter how superior.
Web based media companies (such as Salon and Britannica.com) have been
experimenting with payment and pricing models. But this is besides the
point. Whether in the form of subscription (Britannica), pay per view
(Questia), pay to print (Fathom), sample and pay to buy the physical product
(RealRead), or micropayments (Amazon) - the public refuses to cough up.
Moreover, the advertising-subsidized free content Web site has died together
with Web advertising. Geocities - a community of free hosted, ad-supported,
Web sites purchased by Yahoo! - is now selectively shutting down Web sites
(when they exceed a certain level of traffic) to convince their owners to
revert to a monthly hosting fee model. With Lycos in trouble in Europe,
Tripod may well follow suit shortly. Earlier this year, Microsoft has shut
down ListBot (a host of discussion lists). Suite101 has stopped paying its
editors (content authors) effective January 15th. About.com fired hundreds
of category editors. With the ugly demise of Themestream, WebSeed is the
only content aggregator which tries to buck the trend by relying (partly) on
advertising revenue.
Paradoxically, e-publishing's main hope may lie with its ostensible
adversary: the library. Unbelievably, e-publishers actually tried to limit
the access of library patrons to e-books (i.e., the lending of e-books to
multiple patrons). But, libraries are not only repositories of knowledge and
community centres. They are also dominant promoters of new knowledge
technologies. They are already the largest buyers of e-books. Together with
schools and other educational institutions, libraries can serve as decisive
socialization agents and introduce generations of pupils, students, and
readers to the possibilities and riches of e-publishing. Government use of
e-books (e.g., by the military) may have the same beneficial effect.
As standards converge (Adobe's Portable Document Format and Microsoft's MS
Reader LIT format are likely to be the winners), as hardware improves and
becomes ubiquitous (within multi-purpose devices or as standalone higher
quality units), as content becomes more attractive (already many new titles
are published in both print and electronic formats), as more versatile
information taxonomies (like the Digital Object Identifier) are introduced,
as the Internet becomes more gender-neutral, polyglot, and cosmopolitan -
e-publishing is likely to recover and flourish.
This renaissance will probably be aided by the gradual decline of print
magazines and by a strengthening movement for free open source scholarly
publishing. The publishing of periodical content and academic research
(including, gradually, peer reviewed research) may be already shifting to
the Web. Non-fiction and textbooks will follow. Alternative models of
pricing are already in evidence (author pays to publish, author pays to
obtain peer review, publisher pays to publish, buy a physical product and
gain access to enhanced online content, and so on). Web site rating agencies
will help to discriminate between the credible and the in-credible.
Publishing is moving - albeit kicking and screaming - online.
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Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self
Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East.
He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review,
PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI)
Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central
East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
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