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The following from the Shelf Awareness newsletter:

Regular-Vik-Dark-2.gifPublishers tell the New York Times that the problem of illegal digital copies of print books appearing on the Web “has ballooned in recent months as an expanding appetite for e-books has spawned a bumper crop of pirated editions on Web sites like Scribd and Wattpad, and on file-sharing services like RapidShare and MediaFire.”

Publishers are taking action, often notifying sites of problems. For his part, the CEO of Scribd estimated that unauthorized editions are only a small fraction of the site’s content and that his company is “working very hard” to keep such editions off the site.

Authors have a variety of points of view. Harlan Ellison, who has sued over the issue, said he continues to pursue people who post his work illegally. “If you put your hand in my pocket,” he said, “you’ll drag back six inches of bloody stump.”

At the other, less gruesome end of the spectrum, Cory Doctorow offers free e-versions of his books when they’re published, believing that “free versions, even unauthorized ones, entice new readers.” He explained: “I really feel like my problem isn’t piracy. It’s obscurity.”

 
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