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luton-library TheBookseller.com reports that the Booksellers Association of England and Ireland is expressing concern over the results of a British library review that has proposed a ban on libraries charging for e-book lending.

The BA noted the “undeniable tension” between the library world and the publishing/bookselling world, given that libraries exist to give away information for free and the latter exist to earn a living.

Meanwhile, the Publishers Association has come out in favor of ready access to books whether physical or electronic, and the president of the Society of Chief Librarians says that library reading of any book should not be a charged-for service.

I will admit that I am not entirely familiar with the way British libraries work. I know that, unlike American libraries, they pay a fee to authors for each lending of their books, and I presume that would apply to e-books as well. And of course for libraries that had not been set up to deal with e-books, there would be technical costs in launching and maintaining e-book systems.

I’m still a bit surprised that libraries would think of charging for e-book lending, as that would seem to me to blur the line between libraries and booksellers—especially if you’re paying to check out an e-book that gets checked back in after a set period of time.

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