Quote:I know a lot of people are like that. I met someone once who claimed
if someone else ever left a bicycle unlocked everyone owed it to the
person to steal it just to teach them the importance of keeping it
locked to prevent theft.
Irrelevant...
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I once was narked on by someone I would not
smoke pot with due to thinking he was a nark.
Irrelevant...
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Rationalizing thought glitches are not uncommon in humans.
Here is the thing
For someone like me, an average joe making very little money, its not
worth creating work if it costs me thousands of hours and hundreds of
dollars of IILS request fees in order to lose thousands of dollars.
That is what it takes for creating what I do and what the outcome is
proving to be.
No one pays me to create what I do. If I could I would create and put
out far more than I do and have.
I realize that it costs a lot of time and money to create and publish a book and as I said, the authors need to be compensated. Has this particular author opened up channels to allow people to donate to his cause? Does he have a webpage (that is easily navigational that accepts donations or sells the book directly)? Is his book on Amazon? Has he considered using an on-demand publishing company that does smaller runs? Has he considered selling an e-version of the book with some added perks? If not, then why not?
If he produces high quality content, I have no issue contributing. Also, there are many other ways for an author to be compensated, it just takes thinking outside of the box.
Most of the successful musicians these days realize that they cannot stop piracy and they don't whine and cry over it. They get innovative. Limited edition box sets, perks, bonuses and other things that you cannot download. The same thing could apply to authors. Just like the on the Kickstarter project from Dennis McKenna I posted earlier. If you donate x amount you get x perk.
Like I said, evolve or perish. There is more than one way to skin a cat.
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Let's put that proposal you quote around into another view.
I really need work to get done and as a poor working joe I just can't
afford it.
I need carpentry and plumbing and electrical and medical and dental
and computer repair and welding and land excavation and well drilling
and auto repair and some precision tree falling around buildings. [To
paraphrase:] "The [workers I need] need to be compensated for their
work but if they make it nearly impossible for the average joe to
obtain [ ], then profits obviously aren't a big motivation for
[them]."
Why can't I get free work from all those people since I can't afford them?
In all those cases I really need their help.
All of that is true but I sure don't expect any of them to drop what
they are doing to give me free work.
The pirate is accurately and truthfull saying (again I paraphrase) "In
this day and age, [thievery] is only going to continue to get worse.
I've been a [thief] for many many years and that isn't going to change
any time soon." No, I would not expect that to change. Dishonest
people don't somehow become honest. The claims the person you quote
makes are simply disingenuous.
This is not only preposterous but quite rude as well. I understand that he's a bit sore from losing income for the works he's created but is that really necessary? I personally do not consider piracy thievery if it is used as a way to preview the works and decide if it's worth my money or a donation.
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In the case of information, the need is not really life critical -- in
this case especially since the information is in fact all there if any
person is willing to do some library work (like I did). In fact the
claims below sounds sort of like I would if I added the desire... to be
listening to free live music on top of watching the above
unpaid workers do their thing.
What central complaint board do we voice this to? What site of
indignant expression would they suggest we flock to make our posts?
The only avenues open are lawsuits and contacting each site
individually and then often proving ownership over the copyright or
just being ignored. Repeated for each site while knowing another will
replace any that goes down. Paying an attorney feeds the attorney and
little more than another site taken down by court order. Some like
scribd additionally require a copy of the work be provided to them so
they can retain it and check any further uploads against it to know
its really copyrighted. Its a hell of a lot of time from all of us.
I don't anticipate anything changing but I have adopted a policy of it
impacting what work gets produced. If its out there via piracy I drop
interest in completing wherever the newer version is.
Going to each individual site or getting lawyers on the case isn't going to do anyone any good.
It's wise that he doesn't anticipate anything changing because it's not going to. It is the authors job to market the book in new and innovative ways. It's unfortunate that one can no longer write a book, get it published and see the profits roll in. Not to mention the fact that entheogenic books don't really pull a lot of profit anyway. It's not like it's going to hit the NY Times best seller list. Even the great works of Terrence McKenna never hit it big like that.
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No one is going to care about that but it really is all I can do. Its
less mean-mindedly punitive than realistic. I'm in my mid50s, not just
broke but in poor health and in need of medical help that I can't
afford, and as a result am limited in what I can successfully do. I
have a lot of interests and a lot of projects in various stages of
completion. That won't change but I only have time to work on some of
them not all of them. As I learn what people actually support being
produced that is where I need to put my attention and time.
Once again, has this author opened up the channels to allow people to help him? I believe pirates or not, the entheogenic community is full of love and wants to do the right thing. Is he just too proud to ask for help?
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As for no author caring? He should share his name, phone number and
physical address with me and see how far that is really true. It
would be my pleasure to introduce him to a group of authors who
disagree. I promise that i'd try to exclude anyone who would inflict
serious physical damage to his being.
Yeah, like that's gonna happen...
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The information IS there if people don't expect other people somehow
owe it to them to work for free for them.
That is how I got started doing this.
Too many people are just lazy or cheap or in this person's case it
sounds like both.
You're correct, I am cheap and lazy. So?
I've created and shared works, all of them for free, because I enjoy doing it. I enjoy giving back and I don't expect any sort of compensation for my efforts. If I create something, it's for the simple joy of creation. When people are only motivated by money and not by passion, I believe there is a huge problem.
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All I can say is my experience and that of the authors I know. I've
had this discussion with easily a dozen people who have authored books
that have been pirated
We have all shared the experience of our sales being steady even if in
my case fairly low and then suddenly ceasing or slowing to almost
being nonexistent. We then soon learn that work is online. When sales
stop not just our sales stop but our vendor's sales slow or stop and
they stop ordering more and may even want to return unsold copies.
So you're saying that when you discovered a certain book was online, it's sales diminished? Are you sure that isn't because a proper marketing technique wasn't in place?
As a web developer, I know for a fact in this digital age, "if you build it, they will come" no longer applies. You have to let people know what is available and how to get to it.
I'd guarantee that if a newer and better marketing strategy was in place, you would see profit again.
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At
some point this will start to impact journals as well as when no one
needs to subscribe there is no resources enabling production.
This is all well known in the publishing world as it is the observable
reality for all but certain small niches and why authors are urged not
to make PDF versions of books available before sales have recouped
production costs.
Some people might believe that a PDF file is a bad idea, others would argue that it's the only way. There are thousands if not millions of people making a killing off of e-books. Not to mention that "production costs" are next to nil besides the time spent creating the book if a digital platform is used.
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Its all something any person trying to be creative on a professional
level gets hurt by and runs into, musicians. painters, authors,
software creators. People who don't create are invariably the group
that contains the pirates
Once again, it comes down to thinking outside of the box.
Like I said previously, musicians created limited edition prints of their albums now with extra perks added. The smarter ones have created a way for their fans to purchase their works directly from them. Cut out the middle man and you get all of the profit.
Painters create limited edition, numbered prints to add more value to their works.
Software creators make "Shareware" or demos so you can try before you buy. You get a sample of the product and if you like it or want more features, you buy the full version.
I understand that enthogenic authors cater to very small percentage of the population and as such, profits will be smaller. Were you really expecting to get rich off of writing psychedelic books? Is piracy really the only culprit to blame here? Have you really put some thought into how you can maximize your profits and spread awareness about your product? Is it available to the vast majority of psychonauts? Before calling people lazy thieves, I suggest you go back to the drawing board and think of some additional ways that you could get your works into more peoples hands and set up a way for those people to pay you directly.
Convert a melodic element into a rhythmic element...