It is a well-known fact that the music and movie industry faces plagues because of digital piracy. From the time that the MP3s were launched, it has been quite easy to get music by just going online and downloading it without paying a penny for it.
When people decide to get the free music at a torrent website or a file sharing platform, the end result is less sales for so many artists. It’s the same with the movie industry as the movies get recorded first by movie pirates before they are uploaded to platforms for file sharing.
In recent times, e-books are now being shared by this same method and the problem continues to grow. This came about suddenly and quickly.
More and more books are being digitalized, and that makes it so easy to download them illegally from a file sharing site or a torrent and not have to pay for them.
Much of this has to do with the fact that popular digital mediums like the Kindle and tablet PCs enable the proliferation of books via digital means.
The publishing industry could be dealt a pretty bad blow by this activity; thus, folks should definitely stop and think about how illegal this is and what could happen.
Think about it this way – if this industry is dealt a big blow and the writers who do all the researching and writing expecting good sales in the end do not get them, then the world might have a lot less of good quality writing.
I think that just about everyone would agree that we’d be worse off for that, so the best course of action that one can take is to refrain from doing such things if they’re currently doing them.
Since sales of e-books were above $37 million during the second quarter of 2009, it seems like this is an issue that regulators will be forced to grasp as the use of e-books continues to grow.
In addition to ebooks, the author also frequently writes on metal storage bins and glass display shelves.