Books and Copyrights: or how I learned to stop worrying and love the Nook.

This discussion was inspired by another article about copy rights this time form the Wall Street Journal. 

But in dollar terms, some decisions by copyright holders, rather than optimize the artist's revenue and distribution, insure the opposite. When I asked to use a single line by songwriter Joe Henry, for example, his record label's parent company demanded $150 for every 7,500 copies of my book. Assuming I sell enough books to earn back my modest advance, this amounts to roughly 1.5% of my earnings, all for quoting eight words from one of Mr. Henry's songs.

I love Joe Henry, but the price was too high. I replaced him with Shakespeare, whose work (depending on which edition you use) is in the public domain. Mr. Henry's record label may differ, but it's not clear that his interests —or theirs—are being served here. Were they concerned that readers might have their thirst for Mr. Henry's music sated by that single lyric? Isn't it more likely that his lyric would have enticed customers who otherwise wouldn't have heard of him?

Full article available here

The article reminded me of a story one of my professors told me about the book he created for our class. It's a standard anthology text book of articles and it was only available through the George Mason bookstore for $109.00. I know this professor doesn't like the school book store monopoly and the way publishing companies try and lock us in with special editions for each school of packages so I asked him about the book. He told me that the $109.00 was purely the cost of printing costs and licensing the rights to reprint the articles. My professor in fact made no money off the text book at all. He even told me about how he redid the book to eliminated the more expensive articles in it and the publisher kept the retail price exactly the same with the school store which is run by Barnes and Noble, a company I usually like. Lately he has been assigning more Pdfs that we can get for free from school and online sources. Now free doesn't mean that we're getting any less of an education, in fact the reason he made a anthology in the first place was because he did not approve of the other textbooks available. 

With all the free books I've downloaded form the Ludwig Von Mises institute, currently totaling 1450 books, I've been thinking a lot about this subject. I recently bought a Barnes & Noble Nook to read these books on which currently retails for $150. Before I knew of all of the free resources available to me I was never interested in an ebook reader however, the idea of reading even a tenth of my books on a laptop screen wasn't inviting to me (eye strain). I assessed the currently available ebook readers and chose the Nook because I judged to best fit my needs. Reading on the Nook as been fantastic and I'm happy with it, much more than I've been with any of my text books most of which are similarly priced.

While this may be a situation that applies best to the George Mason economics department I'd like to see B&N trying to encourage professors to recommend eReaders and emphasize the availability of free resources rather than try to lock us to a monopoly school store. I was already interested in these resources and they offered a product that I saw as a good investment which means they made money without rigging what is available to me and fighting used book sales. Instead Barnes & Noble participates in bidding wars for exclusive rights for the GMU bookstore sold by my school to pay for the bloated administration that keeps raising my tuition. Money can be made off of freely distributed materials and it doesn't require any further monopolizing of higher education. 

Katrina's Silver Lining: The School Choice Revolution in New Orleans


From Reason TV

Before hurricane Katrina ravaged the city in 2005, New Orleans had one of the worst performing public school districts in the nation. Katrina forced nearly a million people to leave their homes and caused almost $100 billion in damages. To an already failing public school system, the storm seemed to provide the final deathblow. But then something amazing happened. In the wake of Katrina, education reformers decided to seize the opportunity and start fresh with a system based on choice.

Today, New Orleans has the most market-based school system in the US. 60% of New Orleans students currently attend charter schools, test scores are up, and talented and passionate educators from around the country are flocking to New Orleans to be a part of the education revolution. It's too early to tell if the New Orleans experiment in school choice will succeed over the long term, but for the first time in decades people are optimistic about the future of New Orleans schools.

Approximately 10 minutes. Produced by Paul Feine; hosted by Nick Gillespie; shot by Alex Manning and Dan Hayes; edited by Alex Manning.

As someone who is only recently out of public schools I can say that what is happening for the children of New Orleans is something that will benefit them and others more then they can know. I hope that this can be the spark that lights a fire of education reform that is required to make sure future generations more intelligent then the current ones. They will have a hard future left to them but at least we can fight to give them an education that will help them survive it.