Archive for the ‘Mobile Internet’ Category

Bloomsbury Academic Broadens Range of Formats for Mobile Reading

Attending a seminar at Oxford Internet Institute about network neutrality I got to know about Christopher T. Marsden‘s recent book “Net Neutrality: Towards a Co-Regulatory Solution“. All four speeches at the event were very compelling, and I am looking forward to reading Marsden’s book, which was offered with a 40 per cent discount at the event. A bit tight on budget I also was pleased to hear that the publisher, Bloomsbury Academic, offers a digital version of the book. Although the e-book is available for free under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial (CC NC) license it is offered in a PDF format only, so far.

Therefore I was thinking I would kill three birds with one stone combining my interest in the book, my passion for reading on my iPhone as well as getting an assignment done for the Digital Media Publishing course at Oxford Brookes University. So, I asked the author whether he would mind if I produce a professional EPub version. EPub has floatable text capability and can be displayed on many devices such as Sony’s and Barnes & Noble’s e-readers as well as on smaller screens such as the iPhone.

Christopher Marsden let me know that it wasn’t the first request of this sort and he put me in touch with the publisher. A representative of Bloomsbury Academic immediately responded, not exactly encouraging me, but with some interesting feedback. The publisher will be producing an EPub version of the book along with the launch of its new website in April or May. The CC NC license obviously allows producing an EPub version of the book if it is not used for commercial purposes. This said, the representative stressed the fact that a free EPub version would undermine the company’s business model, which includes charging for EPub versions for various mobile devices. I was recommended to watch a presentation about CC business models given last month at the O’Reilly Tools of Change conference in New York. The presentation (24 min.) also gives a good impression on the publisher’s innovative Open Access approach.

Interestingly, Bloomsbury Academic’s new platform will have plain CC licensed free content in HTML format on its core. The CC version will be subsidised by revenues made from layers on top of it. The EPub versions and print editions will be charged for, and there will be a layer of “enhanced e-books” with extra functionality, extra content and extra metadata. The Bloomsbury Academic Digital Cafe offers collaboration features and an experimental lab. Also taxonomic classification, role-based navigation and tools available to allow readers to cite, email, print and share titles will be implemented. “Bloomsbury Academic will be plugged into the world beyond the site itself, with connections to blogs, podcasts and webcasts to accompany and enhance the world-class content inside.”

However, in the first place I didn’t understand the publisher’s reasoning that a free EPub version would “clearly” diminish sales while the PDF version already is freely available. Given the facts above and by spending quite some time trying to get an acceptable EPub version by using converting tools I learned that, after all, the reasoning does make sense. In fact, converting PDF to EPub turned out to be less seamless and results are even more unsatisfactory than I expected. I tried six different tools and four of them failed miserably, although I have to admit that I still went through them very quick – pretty much as a customer would when demanding to read a book, not on his desk, now.

The process I underwent after creating the EPub file to get it on my iPhone was the same for all six tools, although there are other ways to do it. Reading the Lexcycle’s FAQ section was very useful, and led me to the cloud content management provider Box.net, which enables storing books on a remote server to then download it to your iPhone. On the iPhone I use Stanza, an electronic book reader and book sharing software offered by Lexcycle which was acquired by Amazon last year. Stanza is a native iPhone app, and beside tools for setting bookmarks and taking notes, provides an extra section for showing the table of content (TOC) and for directly jumping to the respective chapter.

The first converter I tried, EPub2Go, was conveniently usable online, but didn’t provide an EPub file with chapter navigation on the iPhone. This makes the result useless unless one doesn’t need this kind of navigation or wants to set his own bookmarks for chapter navigation. This might be a frustrating process as finding the right text passages within around 2000 iPhone pages (according to 320 PDF pages) without any anchors is difficult.

The second tool I tried was Stanza Desktop offered by Lexcycle. It is a tool free to download for converting and also reading EPub files. The result after the conversion was slightly better having at least chapter navigation. Unfortunately the chapter names in the TOC were a mess. By the way, I don’t write about all these ‘minor’ errors, such as having redundant dates and other metadata within the text – it appeared within all conversion results mentioned in this post.

The third tool, Calibre, also recommended by Lexcycle, provides better results than Stanza. It is also free to download and offers “the one stop solution for all your e-book needs” including e-book management, reading e-books and format conversion. Although also having incorrect formatting and literally no navigation before and after the actual text chapters, with the Calibre version it is convenient to navigate to the beginning of each chapter, and I could start reading a specific chapter straight away.

There are opinions floating around in forums that converting to Mobi, RTF or HTML first and than to EPub using Calibre would bring up better results, but after trying the Mobipocket desktop app and getting frustrating results again I didn’t follow up these tips. Generally the non-proprietary Mobi format generated by Mobipocket is nevertheless very useful as it is compatible with the dominating Amazon Kindle e-book platform and an impressive array of mobile phones. Next I turned to proprietary conversion software hoping for a nice ready to go EPub e-book file.

PDFtoEPUB by DNAML Software offers free trials for up to six e-books to convert and it looks promising in the preparation process. For example you can set a frame which allows you to exclude page numbers, header and footer text to make text seamless where in the PDF file there is a page turn. After six files the software would cost $150. The results though didn’t turn out to be satisfying and again there was no chapter navigation.

The last one I tried, a converter from Dongsoft, offering up to 15 items to convert for free and charging $40 beyond this didn’t make me happy either. Also InDesign doesn’t work terribly well with EPub without having prepared the text manually in advance. Another possibility to generate EPub files out of PDF would be to generate a simple XML first and go for the EPub conversion from there.

Summarizing it can be said that the only tool automatically generating a (barely) ‘good enough’ EPub version for the mentioned PDF e-book is the Calibre solution. Although I know there are more tools available (such as this one), and there might be better results achieved spending more time with the mentioned tools, in fact a proper format for reading Marsden’s book on small screens is literally not existing to date.

Therefore offering a professional EPub version for free indeed would reduce Bloomsbury Academic’s sales figures – at least concerning sales of EPub books after its platform launch. What actually is sold with the EPub versions is convenience and additional functionality particularly for mobile reading. By making a plain HTML version of all books Open Access losses from ‘cannibalisation’ will be balanced out by attracting new readers and enabling value added services based on easy to implement interconnection and integration of the publisher’s content.

The new Bloomsbury Academic platform also shows how publishers are focusing more on technology and services rather than paid content business models – and hurdles such as not being able to read a book on the device one prefers will sound pretty stone-age very soon.

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Amazon’s License to Dwarf the Mobile Book App Surge

After a report from the mobile analytics company Flurry, showing the number of book apps released to Apple’s App Store surpassing the numbers of any other type of application, it has been argued that the surge of book apps would indicate that the iPhone poses a challenge to the Kindle. Although it has been approved by Distimo, another mobile analytics company, that the highest percentage of paid apps in the App Store are book apps and a new wave of apps is on the way for Apple’s announced iPad tablet, it seems to be a bit sketchy judging the rivalry between Amazon and Apple just by counting apps.

Kurt Schiller in the January edition of Information Today refers to Frederic Lardinois of ReadWriteWeb who “wrote that the numbers reflected the practice of releasing ebooks as stand-alone apps and added, ‘[I]t’s quite easy for developers to release large numbers of e-books. Developers just have to switch out the text, rename the app and send it to Apple for approval.’” Schiller also quotes John Herrman of Gizmodo who “observed that a single public domain title may have as many as a dozen individual apps.” (Schiller 2010)

Compared to currently about 27,000 App Store book apps available for reading on an iPod or iPhone, Amazon offers more than 410,000 ebooks for the Kindle platform in file format.

Even if one takes all app stores into account, most publishers are pursuing a multi-platform strategy and there will be standards for developing apps across multiple platforms as just announced at the Mobile World Congress. Eventually, taking out the redundancies, the amount of all book apps combined should be not overwhelmingly different than the amount of apps within the leading app store.

Although there are more than 40 million iPhones sold compared to estimated two to three million Kindle reading devices, all Apple devices are not yet suitable for long-form reading and the Kindle is not just a device but a multi-device platform available for the iPhone as well as PC and soon Mac and Blackberry. Because selling hardware still is Apple’s main business and the value of the hardware is determined by useful apps and content which can be “played” on it, there might be a Kindle app for the iPad, just as there are music apps competing with iTunes on the iPod and iPhone.

More important, and certainly one of the strengths of Amazon, is having information about ebook purchases and ebook usage. Therefore, not just because the reflective display of the reading device, Amazon’s platform, much more than Apple’s, is dedicated to people who are reading a lot – and this small percentage of readers contributes the largest chunk to ebook revenues.

By introducing the Active Content SDK and app store, Amazon will be able to deliver not only apps for improved reading of ebook files but, as other app stores, self-contained content apps for books as well. Also the Kindle devices will become more open regarding Internet access. In contrast to app stores and classical ebook stores mainly delivering file downloads, Google will enter the fast growing ebook market with Google Editions, a device independent cloud-based approach where ebooks can be read online as well as offline using HTML5.

At the same time books are in a process of constant price decline (Clement 2009), and data about purchasing and reading books becomes pivotal also for new book business models. Mobile native apps and browser based ebook platforms offer a whole host of new possibilities for analysis of content related data and integration of external data sources for creating value added services and enhanced semantic content.

Authors more often are passing rights directly to Amazon while publishers are questioning the agency model and are asserting contractual terms that mean the publisher is licensing its rights to Amazon for having the works “republished via the Kindle publishing platform”. Having the final say about how this platform looks like and basically becoming a publisher itself, Amazon eventually is in a better position than Apple to adapt ebook content flexibly to native and web apps for leveraging the sprouting value of text-rich mobile content.

References:

Clement, M., 2009. Ökonomie der Buchindustrie Herausforderungen in der Buchbranche erfolgreich managen :: Wiesbaden, Gabler Verlag / GWV Fachverlage GmbH, Wiesbaden.

Schiller, K., Jan2010. Ebook Apps Multiply on iPhone. Information Today, 27(1), p19-19.

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Review: The Future of the Internet – And How to Stop It

In preparation for a paper exploring business strategies for digital publishing via mobile networks, in this post I will review the book “The Future of the Internet – And How to Stop It1 written by professor of Harvard Law School and co-founder of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Jonathan Zittrain.

In contrast to approaches where compromises on network neutrality on a network level are pivotal, Zittrain focuses on Internet lockdown on an endpoint level through tethered appliances. This emphasize is dead-on as indicated not just by invasive measures such as Amazon’s remote erasure of e-books from the Kindle, but also by Google’s moves promoting an open Internet environment by offering products such as the Android operating system and the just recently released unlocked Nexus One smartphone.

While having commercial implications for publishers in the back of my mind, I will focus on reviewing the first part of the book where Zittrain illustrates actual developments of the Internet, and I will neglect the second part where he is rather looking for solutions of issues broached from a lawyer’s angle. Although Apple’s App Store (launched shortly after the book was published) finds its mention in Zittrain’s preface, I will bring it to bear further along the road.

Two Battles

By diving into the history of the Internet, Zittrain in an intriguing way describes two parallel battles: the advance of PCs outpacing appliancized machines such as dedicated word-processors, and the replacement of proprietary networks such as CompuServe by the Internet. First, in contrast to appliances which are sealed when they leave the factory, PCs can be repurposed as they support a variety of programs from a variety of makers. This model, having ever new code running on the computers, was appealing commercially for hardware and OS makers selling the platform as well as for third-party developers.

Secondly, Zittrain describes the first online services which gave their subscribers access to content and services deployed solely by the network providers. Beyond this AT&T, the largest carrier in the US, controlled not only the network itself but even the devices attached. After the FCC prohibited AT&T’s restrictions of competitive devices, the epochal change took off with the advance of the modem which connected computers to networks. Most of the networks though have been centrally controlled and all have been proprietary. The network provider’s business model basically was charging subscribers hourly rates for using content and services strung to their network. Contrarily the Internet was built as a decentralized network with focus on simplicity and compatibility. Content and services have not been bundled to the network.

Eventually, Zittrain writes, “Just as the general-purpose PC beat leased and appliancized counterparts that could perform only their manufacturers’ applications and nothing else, the Internet first linked to and than functionally replaced a host of proprietary consumer network services.“

Generativity

Both battles determined the potential for innovation as well as the grade of generativity of the overall digital information infrastructure. Zittrain defines generativity as “a system’s capacity to produce unanticipated change through unfiltered contributions from broad and varied audiences” and he points out five principal factors that make a system or technology generative. First, “leverage” describes how extensively a system leverages a set of possible tasks. The “more a system can do, the more capable it is of producing change.” Second, “adaptability refers to how easily the system can be built on or modified to broaden its range of use”. Third, the “ease of mastery reflects how easy it is for broad audiences to understand how to adopt and adapt it. (…) The more useful a technology is both to the neophyte and to the expert, the more generative it is.” Another factor is “accessibility”. The easier it is to obtain access to a technology, (…) the more generative it is.” And finally “transferability indicates how easily changes in the technology can be conveyed to others.”

The Onslaught

But the generative Internet and reprogrammable PCs are by far not the upshot. CompuServe and word processors just seemed to be the evolutionary dead end but in fact are not dead at all. They “have been only sleeping.” Zittrain continues explaining the impropriety of the Internet’s initial purpose and its current use. Because the Internet was build with a trust-your-neighbour approach and without any reliable structure to manage personal identity, it was open not only to content and innovative services and software, but to dangerous code as well. Within proprietary networks feature rollouts are performed only by the administrators and users and programmers are separated – unlike within the Internet, where literally anybody could offer and install software. Starting with hacks in a small rather friendly competitive community, bad code over the years became increasingly elaborated and rampant. Ethics changed with scale and eventually programming malicious software even got a viable business model – with staggering consequences.

Botnets are used to send ever-improving spam messages and to target certain websites to blackmail the site owners. Zittrain writes: “The going rate for a botnet to launch such an attack is reputed to be about $50000 per day”. With one out of 10 home computers being contributing to botnets such “zombie computers were responsible for more than 80% of the world’s spam in June 2006, and spam in turn accounted an estimated 80% of the world’s total e-mail.” Accordingly he refers to security experts such as Eugene Kaspersky who says that antivirus vendors “may not be able to withstand the onslaught.”

Tethered Appliances

Zittrain continues to argue that as a result “consumers find themselves frustrated about PCs at a time when a variety of information appliances are arising as substitutes for the activities they value most such as browsing the World Wide Web and watching videos.” Because mobile phones, game consoles and e-book readers are controlled by their makers and their design often anticipates uses and abuses, they can be saver and more effective. Eventually consumers will abandon PCs in favour for these non-generative devices and services. Sterile “tethered appliances” come into dominance.

Conditioned Access

Thereby the user’s Internet access is compromised in many ways. For example mobile phones’ Internet “access is channelled through browsers provided and controlled by the phone service vendors. (…) Carriers have forced telephone providers to limit the mobile phones’ Web browsers to certain carrier-approved sites.” Further, software makers can not have their code run on the devices without deals, while even simply “surfing the World Wide Web often entails accepting and running new code. The Web was designed to seamlessly integrate material from disparate sources (…) not only through hyperlinks (…) but through placeholders that incorporate data and code from elsewhere into the original page.” Zittrain recalls the fact that these Web protocols have spawned the massive advertising industry that powers companies like Google. Also he notes that Skype has petitioned the FCC that customers can select whatever software and device they want to use on a network – much like what Google is aiming for with the Nexus One.

Enforcement

Zittrain refers to Lawrence Lessig and Joel Reidenberg and underpins the proposition, that code could be law. Preventing an e-book from being printed is a code based enforcement mechanism. And so is the practise that “devices, like the iPhone, are updated in ways that actively seek out and erase any user modification. (…) Appliances become contingent: rented instead of owned, even if one pays up front for them, since they are subject to instantaneous revision. (…) Those who control the tethered appliances can control the behaviour undertaken with the device in a number of ways: pre-emption, specific injunction, and surveillance.” Pre-emption refers for example to the numerous DRM-restrictions such as permitting printing an e-book file. Specific injunction can be deletion of particular content from recorded program on a DVR (or from an e-book reader). This kind of “tailoring also could be user-specific”. Finally, surveillance includes recording transactions and browsing behaviour.

Considering the harsh debates and court cases about so called piracy and file-sharing it is worth emphasizing Zittrain’s argument that comprehensive regulatory crackdowns require either influence over the individual user or non-generative endpoints. Just as long as any sort of basic Internet access remains, you find a way around network blocks.

SaaS and Web 2.0

Due to software as a service (SaaS) models and migration of applications away from our own devices to the “cloud”, the extent of control via tethered appliances becomes even more prevalent.

App Store Model

Zittrain also explains that generative and non-generative models are not mutually exclusive and can be intertwined within a single system. He does not explicitly refer to app stores as being such an in-between but notes in regard to Apple’s App Store that “there is another model for lockdown that is much more subtle. (…) These technologies let “outsiders build upon them just as they could with PCs, but in a controlled and contingent way. This is iPhone 2.0 (…) with a driving market for software (…) that must be approved by and funnelled through Apple.”

Network and API Neutrality

The Internet’s design is intended to allow all data to be treated in the same way. Coevally there is no guarantee for transmission speed and bandwidth which constantly evokes debates about network neutrality. Network operators want to compromise the non-discrimination principal with network-screening, deep packet inspection (DPI) and other so called network management and quality of service (QoS) measures. “For example, an ISP might block Skype in order to compel the ISP’s users to subscribe to its own Internet telephony offering” (see link to petition above). Zittrain is going so far to “imagine ISPs then offering free internet access to their customers, with that access paid for by content providers like Google that want to reach those costumers.”

Having said this, he also points out: “If their is a present worldwide threat to neutrality in the movement of bits, it comes not from restrictions of traditional Internet access that can be evaded using generative PCs, but from enhancements to traditional and emerging appliancized services that are not open to third-party tinkering.” Zittrain calls for shifting focus from network neutrality to “API neutrality”.

Opportunity to be Controlled

Furthermore one can assume, while the challenges to network neutrality coming from network providers are explicitly a matter of authorities’ regulation on a national and international level, the limitations of individual Internet access on a level of endpoints is rather a result of supposedly free choice by consumers and thus can not be influenced on a regulatory level. Zittrain names it people’s “opportunity to respond to these problems by moving away from the PC toward more centrally controlled – “tethered” – information appliances like mobile phones”.

Publisher’s Premise

The changes described and anticipated by Zittrain obviously have massive impact on content companies such as publishers as well. “The Internet security problem is only one item within a basket of conflicts whose balance is greatly affected by the rise of the generative Internet. Some entrepreneurs who have benefited from the disruption of the late 1990s naturally wish to close the door behind them—enjoying the fruits of the generative grid while denying them to the next round of innovators. First among the injured are the publishing industries whose intellectual property’s value is premised on maintaining scarcity, if not fine-grained control, over the creative works in which they have been granted some exclusive rights.” Zittrain also points out that the creative commons (CC) licensing model is a boon for content level generativity and as a result of the uncompromised Internet the generative proliferation of content (for Wikipedia for example) bypassed the slow-to-change walled garden content.

Conclusion

In case of the pre-Internet proprietary networks which “were outbeating the bushes for content, arranging to provide it through the straight forward economic model of being paid by people who would spend connect time browsing it”, Zittrain suggests that the network providers’ “natural desire to act as gatekeepers” and to cut individual deals for revenue sharing with content providers have been reasons for eventually having been outpaced by the generative Internet.

Considering the changed IT-security situation today, where in fact convenient access without hassle could become a new scarcity, control – not over creative works themselves, but over dedicated points to access them – can be seen as not imposed and incapacitating, but rather as a useful and transparent offering. It is worth wondering whether acting as a gatekeeper and bundling content – not on a network level but on the level of endpoints – would more likely be a realistic and seminal way to go than another dead end as often anticipated with levity. To which extent these options can be a prospect of success for publishers being in coopetition with a whole host of new potent intermediaries remains to be seen.

[1] Jonathan Zittrain, The future of the Internet and how to stop it (New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press, 2008).

Update: Checking a quotation, I bumped into the amazing interactive book project of The Institute for the Future of the Book linked now above and meant to engage with Zittrain’s text. In one of the paragraph-specific comments I found the recommendation to watch “The System of Ownership of Ideas” parts 1, 2, and 3.  It’s a profound speech by professor of law and legal history at Columbia University and founder of the Software Freedom Law Center, Eben Moglen, who states for example: “The welfare law of the 20th century was the creators deprived of the opportunity to create by the oligopolistic need to reduce output to raise price.” He also argues: Because there is no consistency between the guarantee of fundamental human rights and the system of the ownerships of ideas, we will eliminate the law of intellectual property – by eliminating distributors.

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Hardware Sucks: Content Demonetization and Publisher’s Trace

Chris Anderson might have been criticized for being a pop-scientist and I regret not having a list of cited works of his recent book FREE1 within my paper back edition. Still, after a short presentation I did in middle of June, asking how publishers can cope with content devaluation, now in Anderson’s book I stumbled upon the term “demonetization” which in fact comes closer to what I was talking about in my presentation. In this article I will shortly rework my thinking, summarize some essential ideas Anderson came up with and I will give additional thoughts on hardware markets as a driver of demonetization of content as well as an opportunity for publishers.

The idea behind devaluation of content is simple. There is just much more content available because it is much easier to produce and distribute content and the technology to do this is becoming ever cheaper. As the prices of bandwidth, storage and computer processing power decline (Anderson describes the cubic decay even topping Moore’s Law) the growth in amount of content is staggering – it might be even exponential. With this explosion there is also a new business logic becoming prevalent which Jeff Jarvis describes as “link economy” in contrast to “content economy”. These two logics clash because one measures the value of content by its links (it is like currency) while the other one requires a “pay-wall” to keep up pay-per-unit revenues but which obviously imposes barriers for links and opportunities to reap other revenue sources. Because free content handled within the link economy exceeds paid content in amount and often is an acceptable alternative regarding quality (or the paid content is copied bypassing the pay-wall), the willingness to pay for content is shrinking and traditional business models don’t work anymore unless your content is an extremely light buoy of continuous exclusiveness.

To make the clash tangible I showcased in my presentation two prominent players in the news industry who embrace the rules of internet and the link economy. I introduced the New York Time’s bold move to provide an API offering third-party company developers access to the Times’ entire online article archive going back to 1981 which has “triggered a whole host of mash-ups, increasing the reach and value of its content”. Secondly, the Guardian Open Platform “which will allow users to build their own applications in return for carrying Guardian advertising”. In opposition to this idea I illustrated the A.P.’s stance and the hassle it has with aggregators which has been refreshed by its recent announcements to crack down on unpaid use of articles on the web by licensing even small snippets. Also I mentioned the push of some German publishers to find a collecting society to encounter revenue losses and to enforce legislation to give them ancillary copyright which would bring them in a better position to sue people using content they publish. Ambitions like this culminated recently in the Hamburg Declaration signed by 166 European publishers. Nevertheless, these ambitions and Rupert Murdoch with his latest decision to charge for online content might be wrong.

Chris Anderson’s book, Free – The Future of a Radical Price, comprises what I was talking about in my presentation and examines a variety of aspects circling around the idea that something is available for free. He stresses the fact that there is a difference between twentieth-century Free and twenty-first-century Free, the second rather based on economics of bits, not atoms. “The near-zero marginal costs of digital distribution allow us to be indiscriminate in what we use it for – no gatekeepers are required to decide if something deserves global reach or not.” While proclaiming an abundance of information Anderson refers to the Law of Conversion of Attractive Profits introduced by Clayton Christenson a couple of years ago: “Products that can become commoditized and cheap tend to do so, and companies seeking profits move upstream in search of new scarcities. Where abundance drives the cost of something to the floor, value shifts to adjacent levels”.

He outlines four categories – or rather characteristics – of free-based business models which are all variations of four kinds of cross-subsidy, “shifting money around from product to product, person to person, between now and later or into non-monetary markets and back out again.” The first model is based on direct (within one company) cross-subsidies where one product or service is given away for free to promote something else for what money is charged for. The fact that sometimes the giveaway has to be purchased from another company doesn’t make it a case of the second model which is called Three-Party Market. This model is “the extension of the media business model to industries of all sorts”. It’s not just about advertising but attention based revenues from a second market or customer class. The third model, called Freemium, is actually a case of the first model but the product or service given away is a limited version of something and it is charged for the advanced version. For digital products this model becomes much more attractive because the “ration of free to paid is reversed” as the cost of serving 95 percent of users is close enough to zero to be subsidized by the fee charged from the five percent premium users. The distinctive credential of the fourth “model” is that the subsidy crosses the blurry border between markets measured in money and markets rather based on attention and reputation. Anderson’s systematization helps to demystify the term Free although he doesn’t go very far at this point to explore the adjacent value levels or, as Kevin Kelly coined it, the “stuff which can’t be copied”, which becomes scarce and valuable instead of what now becomes abundant and which is better than free.

Anderson appoints six drivers of content devaluation. One is the growth of supply of content coupled with the obvious limit of demand (and attention). Secondly, with the loss of physical form content can be replicated without actually depriving the originator, although this is objected in often awkward court cases against so called piracy. The third is the ease of access and thereby decline of search costs resulting in a decline of “willingness to pay for having content made available”. Fourth, the advance of the ad-supported free content model results in consumers expecting content to be free anywhere. Another reason for content devaluation is that a new generation has grown up in the digital economy being habituated to free content and “either indifferent or hostile to copyright”. As there is a constant interdependency between recipients, technologies and business models I don’t see a specific point here. Finally, the computer and hardware industry wants content to be free, because the more content is available the more valuable the devices through which content is consumed. I’m going to examine this point in more detail below. Furthermore the fact that software companies such as search engines have a vested interest in cheap and free content too should be addressed in this collection of drivers.

These drivers might be analyzed using the term demonetization rather than the term devaluation because value shifts and is scattered. Anderson explains: Although something is free doesn’t mean that there isn’t someone making lots of money or lots of people make little money. Regarding the demonetization of the classified ad market enabled by sites such as Craigslist the value “is distributed among the site’s hundreds of thousands of users”. Similarly in the case of Wikipedia, part of the demonetization process of a billion dollar encyclopaedia market. Anderson continues: “…because an incomparable information source is now available to all at no cost, our own ability to make money armed with more knowledge is improved (…) In other words, it’s shrinking the value we can measure (direct revenues), even as it’s hugely increasing the value we can’t (our collective knowledge)”. On the other hand tiny amounts of money go back to Wikipedia via corporate donors who pass on the donation costs to their paying consumers.

Anderson’s model of cross-subsidy between monetary and non-monetary markets challenges economics as a science all together: “What can not be directly measured in economic systems is handwaved away into a category called “externalities” and another way to “handle things which don’t fit into basic models” are opportunity costs. Anderson seems to criticise the “basic models” and “standard theories”. On the other hand he builds on standard theories such as the conservation law: “wealth doesn’t vaporize”. So, what is it all about? Would it be a good idea to include more of these externalities into an economic theory? At least they become more measureable as people move their communication and relations online – of course with some questionable equations like: amount of links is equal to reputation. Additionally I was wondering why the cross-subsidies “back out” of nonmonetary markets, the provision of value into monetary markets by crowds of people allegedly keen mainly on reputation, isn’t elaborated that explicitly by Anderson. The crowd from which something is sourced might not lose knowledge or money but these people expend time and attention – also on things again which are monetized by others.

As emphasized by Google’s announcement to offer a free operating system, software markets are demonetized as are the travel agent and the stockbroker businesses and, of course, content markets. One major impact on content value, other than the effect of search engines, derives from hardware markets. As content becomes digital it requires appliances and new infrastructure to be received. Content distributed via Apple Stores for example can be seen rather as a means for Apple to sell iPods and iPhones. If necessary, the content is subsidized in order to keep prices down to keep up demand for these highly profitable devices2. In content markets Apple competes with Amazon which drives content prices even further down. Apple doesn’t need to be actually in the content market though. It just collects the market-makers fee for letting the trading happen in the iPhone arena and will take a 30% commission. “Since Amazon have a track record of obtaining 55-65% discounts from book publishers, and since Google’s terms trade for the Settlement have been announced at 38% (plus a bit more), the Apple share does not look too greedy. But for the daily expense in running the Store it is a fat margin.” Apple’s infrastructure definitely attracts publishers as CourseSmart LCC just indicated. Founded by Pearson, John Wiley & Sons Inc. and others it’s offering 7,000 titles of its e-textbooks for iPhone.

Amazon meanwhile by acquiring Lexcycle, the owner of the leading e-book reader application used on the iPhone, and by launching its iPhone-optimized Kindle store, has shown that it is heading to a further integrated e-book strategy going beyond the Kindle e-reader. This strategy also deprives publishers of direct costumer relation, ownership of costumer data and control of pricing. “In selling e-books at $9.99, Amazon effectively takes a loss on each sale because publishers generally charge booksellers about half the list price of a hardcover ­ typically, around $13 or $14.” By bundling e-books with the Kindle it assigns the costs improperly and subsidizes the e-books which are undercosted to push Kindle sales and further network effects. The content eventually will be demonetized while Amazon moves upstream to leverage the e-reader market as well as data regarding sales, products and customers which is essential for personalization of content, advertisement and e-commerce.

Google is going to offer a cloud-based alternative to Amazon while simply selling access to e-books via mobile phones as well as the Sony Reader, the Kindle’s largest competitor. As Google is making money from advertisement and benefits hugely from the link-economy it obviously enforces open standards, makes millions of public domain books available for free and reserves the right to set prices as well.

Because of the loss of control and dumping prices for e-books, publishers such as Hearst, the New York Times and Newscorp. announced the introduction of their own e-readers. The bookseller Barnes & Noble will be the exclusive provider for content on the Plastic Logic reading device. There are several new e-readers and e-reader-like appliances announced for the coming season and publishers already compete in this fast paced market with powerful technology companies. Some of these companies bet on open standards, some have their own online stores and some are bargaining with publishers about pricing conditions to bundle content subscriptions with their hardware. Either way, there wouldn’t be much reason not to behave like Amazon and to try to undercut even the $9,99 to get a share of retail, hardware and data related markets. There would be only slightly more reason for publishers not to do so, but by entering the appliances and mobile platform space they are more likely to manage the transition and to carry over their competencies to make them work for them.

Apple has set the paradigm and established a completely new market with its App Store and many other phone companies like RIM and even network operators follow. A recent Forrester report claims that the next wave of e-book reader use devices they already own and some argue that the Kindle market is insignificant compared to the mass of people reading e-books on their phone or laptop. The advantages for phone companies against e-reader companies are evident. The price for an extra device is still too high. With mostly voice service available and better browsing features (some e-readers don’t even have wireless connection yet to purchase and link content) it’s more probable to cooperate with network providers to subsidize their fancy devices as it’s speculated for the upcoming Apple, Nokia and HTC tablets. The Dell 5-inch touchscreen tablet, expected to hit the market in around six months, will be provided free of charge to users who sign up to digital content subscriptions and it will directly compete with Amazon’s Kindle e-reader. If such devices are becoming cheaper and if they would have additional features like telephony capability, this would create more revenue and more flexibility in pricing. Hence, subscription models, where not only the hardware but the content is cross-subsidized and feels like free are becoming realistic not just for music but for all digital content, including e-books.

Markets for mobile digital content as well as for mobile appliances and platforms are becoming bigger and more fragmented. Publishers have to find the right mix of subscription, pay-per-unit, ad-supported and free-based models. They have to further explore the potential of price differentiation, content customization and bundling of different content formats and services and they need to be aware of the sometimes counterintuitive new conditions. Beyond this they need a sustainable mobile strategy and have to find appropriate partners to diversify into adjacent value levels. To gear into hardware segments of content related value chains is one of these new sources of value, as well as a precondition for leveraging adjacent sources of income by engaging with audiences in the direction media consumption is heading – the mobile internet.

[1] Chris Anderson, Free : the future of a radical price (London: Random House Business, 2009).

[1] Michel Clement, Ökonomie der Buchindustrie Herausforderungen in der Buchbranche erfolgreich managen (Wiesbaden: Gabler Verlag / GWV Fachverlage GmbH, Wiesbaden, 2009).

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