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books The avalanche has started, but the pebbles are still trying to vote.

That’s the sense I get from some articles and attendant analyses that came out of BEA last week.

This Reuters piece has quotes from Kobo and Penguin execs about how publishers really would like a universal, platform-agnostic e-book format so that books bought from one source can be read on any device. The fly in the ointment is the need for DRM due to concerns over piracy.

Ars Technica has a deeper analysis of the issue, taking the Reuters piece as a starting point and talking to writers and others in the industry about it.

"The problem still lies with publishing houses and their inability to talk to one another. Everyone is doing their own thing without any regard for readers or customers," [self-published author Cesar] Torres said. "Apple and Amazon would be toast if publishers really got their act together."

The problem as Ars sees it is that publishers can’t agree on how to handle e-books. Some, like Baen, are quite progressive about it. Others seem to want to protect print books at e-books’ expense. And e-book sellers such as Amazon, Apple, and Barnes and Noble don’t have incentive to press for more universality—they use their own unique DRMs because it’s in their favor to tie buyers as closely to them as possible.

And Kassia Krozser at Booksquare sees a lack of leadership from publishers on the most important issues, which means retailers are taking the bit in their teeth and building out e-book purchasing processes that make it easy and painless for customers to buy from—and be locked into—them.

She also has some things to say about the idea that concern over piracy and DRM is what is holding e-books back:

Piracy is publishing’s bogeyman. It exists, oh, does it exist, but all the DRM in the world won’t stop it. Keeping books in print-only formats won’t stop it. Smarter thinking about piracy is the key. Heck, we don’t even know how big a problem piracy is. There is much intellectual dishonesty in publishing about this very real problem.

I think that the publishing industry really could do a better job of handling this transition. As Krozser says, there needs to be more leadership in the field. But publishers are as human as the rest of us, so I imagine the disagreements will continue.

It’s also worth noting that, even as execs from Penguin claim the problem is DRM and piracy, they are instituting pricing that readers are finding upsetting and offensive. That doesn’t seem to be the way forward to me.

 
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