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| The battle to determine the future of e-book pricing |
The current e-book landscape is dominated by the titanic presence of Amazon and their e-book sales. They use a wholesale model to determine the pricing for the e-books they sell. This model allows them to set the price of the books they sell rather than the publisher having the ability to set the price. Apple on the other hand was trying to set up a e-book marketplace of its own using an agency model that would allow the publishers to set the price of e-books rather than Apple itself. The issue surrounding the case is the accusation by Amazon that Apple forced publishers to move to a model that artificially inflated the prices of digital books and hurt consumers. This move would definitely hurt consumers by increasing the price of e-books. The evidence in this case shows many communications in the form of emails and phone calls between the CEOs of the five largest publishing companies during the time that they were all negotiating with Apple over the pricing of e-books on its marketplace. It will be interesting to see what the court decides in this case, because the decision will have immediate consequences for e-book consumers.
Apple's decision to allow the publishers to set the price of their e-books makes sense for those who are willing to pay more for e-books, and it certainly will make Apple more money. I think that people who are using Apple devices obviously don't care too much about the price of their media. An Ipad costs upwards of $500.00, and a standard e-reader costs less than half of that ($200). The publishers are going to make more money selling on Apple's store as well as all believed Amazon's $9.99 pricing to be too low, and wanted a way to change it. If Apple's model of pricing survives this court case, they will have got that way.




