FC: Eric Flint on copyright, ePublishing, and the Baen Free Library

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Thu Apr 18 2002 - 10:50:01 PDT

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    Date: Wed, 17 Apr 2002 11:44:49 -0400
    From: Dean Sutherland <dfsutherat_private>
    To: declanat_private
    Subject: Eric Flint on copyright, ePublishing, and the Baen Free Library
    
    Declan:
    
    
    The essay below was written by Eric Flint, a well-respected Science Fiction 
    author.  He's been sponsoring, along with Jim Baen of Baen Books, the Baen 
    Free Library, a collection of complete novels freely available on the Web 
    (see http://www.baen.com/library/ ) for details.  Eric writes periodic 
    essays about issues having to do with the Free Library.  This is his 
    latest.  He's given permission to post it far and wide, subject only to 
    noting that it is copyright Eric Flint.
    
    
    Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions.  You can reach 
    Eric Flint through Baen Books (www.baen.com) if you have any questions 
    about the propriety of posting his essay.
    
    Dean F. Sutherland
    dfsutherat_private
    
    
    ===================================
    
    Prime Palaver #6
    
    Eric Flint
    
    April 13, 2002
    
    
    	The Free Library was set up about a year and half ago, with the 
    co-operation of Baen Books. Leaving aside the various political and 
    philosophical issues, which I've addressed elsewhere, the premise behind 
    the Library had a practical component as well. In brief, that in relative 
    terms an author will gain, not lose, by having titles in the Library.
    
    	What I mean by "relative" is simply this: overall, an author is far more 
    likely to increase sales than to lose them. Or, to put it more accurately, 
    exposure in the Library will generate more sales than it will lose.
    
    	As a practical proposition, the theory behind the Free Library is that, 
    certainly in the long run, it benefits an author to have a certain number 
    of free or cheap titles of theirs readily available to the public. By far 
    the main enemy any author faces, except a handful of ones who are famous to 
    the public at large, is simply obscurity. Even well-known SF authors are 
    only read by a small percentage of the potential SF audience. Most readers, 
    even ones who have heard of the author, simply pass them up.
    
    	Why? In most cases, simply because they don't really know anything about 
    the writer and aren't willing to spend $7 to $28 just to experiment. So, 
    they keep buying those authors they are familiar with.
    
    	What the Free Library provides--as do traditional libraries, or simply the 
    old familiar phenomenon of friends lending each other books--is a way for 
    people to investigate a new author for free, before they plunk down any money.
    
    	That was the premise behind the Free Library, when I first set it up. At 
    the time, since I had no experience to go by, I was basing that on common 
    sense as well as Jim Baen's experienced judgement as a longtime publisher.
    
    	Now, with a year and a half's experience with the Library actually 
    established and running, I feel confident that our original assessment has 
    been demonstrated in practice. The Library's track record shows clearly 
    that the traditional "encryption/enforcement" policy which has been 
    followed thus far by most of the publishing industry is just plain stupid, 
    as well as unconscionable from the viewpoint of infringing on personal 
    liberties.
    
    	And the stupidity seems bottomless. I just discovered, for instance, that 
    one of the main e-book reader manufacturers (Gemstar) has now decided, in 
    its new software, to make it impossible for its customers to read any 
    unencrypted material--even material from something like Project Gutenberg. 
    Gemstar customers will now only be able to read software purchased from 
    Gemstar itself. So, once again, an industry which has been a failure from 
    the outset because of its obsession with encryption is simply deepening its 
    commitment to that obsession.
    
    ***
    
    	Let me ask a simple question. Does anyone have any real evidence that 
    having material available for free online--whether legitimately or through 
    piracy--has actually caused any financial harm to any author?
    
    	The entire argument for encryption rests precisely upon this PRESUMPTION. 
    A presumption which has never once been documented or demonstrated--and 
    which, to the contrary, has been cast into question any number of times.
    
    	I am about to cast it into question again. Here are a number of facts 
    which you should consider:
    
    	1) The first title to go up into the Library was my own novel, Mother of 
    Demons. That was my first published novel, which came out in print in 
    September of 1997. At the time it went into the Free Library, in the fall 
    of 2000, that novel had sold 9,694 copies, with a sell-through of 54%.
    
    ("Sell-through" refers to the percentage of copies shipped which are 
    actually sold, as opposed to being returned to the publisher.)
    
    	As of today, according to Baen Books--a year and a half after being 
    available for free online to anyone who wants it, no restrictions and no 
    questions asked -- Mother of Demons has sold about 18,500 copies and now 
    has a sell-through of 65%.
    
    	I would like someone to explain to me how almost doubling the sales and 
    improving the sell-through by 11% has caused me, as an author, any harm?
    
    	To be sure, most of that improvement is not due to the Library. It's 
    simply due, I'm quite sure, to the fact that I've become a better known 
    author in the meantime. Still, it is impossible to argue that the Library 
    has hurt me any. To the contrary, I think there is every reason to believe 
    that the added exposure the Library has given me helped the sales of that 
    book -- as well as all of my other books.
    
    	And the exposure is considerable, by the way. The fact that being in the 
    Library does not seem to have hurt sales of Mother of Demons in the least 
    -- to put it mildly! -- is not due to the Library's obscurity. Quite the 
    opposite, in fact. There were more than 130,000 visits to the Free Library 
    in the last quarter of 2001 -- almost 1,500 a day.
    
    	To date, my best-selling title has been my novel 1632. That book came out 
    in hardcover in February 2000, and was reissued in paperback in February 
    2001. I put it in the Free Library at the same time as it came out in 
    paperback format.
    
    	Today, more than a year later, the paperback edition of 1632 has a net 
    sales of about 34,000 copies and has a sell-through of 88%. If being 
    available for free in the Library has hurt me any, with that book, I'd be 
    puzzled to see how.
    
    	Let's look in closer detail at the progress of another title in the 
    Library, this time using a novel I co-authored with David Drake: An Oblique 
    Approach, the first volume in the Belisarius series. I think these figures 
    demonstrate the impact of the Library more clearly than any other.
    
    	An Oblique Approach went into the Library a few days after Mother of 
    Demons -- i.e., it's been available for free for a year and a half now. 
    That novel first came out in paperback in March of 1998. (There was no 
    hardcover edition.) Here are the royalty figures on that novel, beginning 
    with the first period for which figures are available and ending with the last:
    
    					Period  Net sales  S/T	New sales
    
    July-Dec 1998		30,431		70%		30,431
    
    Jan-June 1999		35,977		80%		5,546
    
    July-Dec 1999		36,812		78%		   835
    
    Jan-June 2000		37,607		77%		   795
    
    	[An Oblique Approach goes into the Library mid-way through this period]
    
    July-Dec 2000		39,268		77%		1,161
    
    Jan-June 2001		41,172		77%		1,904
    
    	The most interesting -- and unusual -- aspect of these figures are the 
    ones on the right, in the column titled "new sales." From the beginning, An 
    Oblique Approach has enjoyed an excellent sell-through  --  77 to 80% -- so 
    it would be surprising to see much change there. (The average for SF 
    paperbacks in the industry as a whole is no better than 50%, and probably a 
    lot closer to 40%. In short, in terms of sell-through, An Oblique Approach 
    is doing almost twice as well as the average.)
    
    	The overall net sales figures are not especially surprising either. An 
    initial "out of the gate" net sales figure of about 30,000 is nothing 
    outstanding, but is eminently solid for a paperback title, especially when 
    combined with a good sell-through. (The average paperback sells, 
    traditionally, about 15,000 copies -- but the actual figure has probably 
    been lower for several years now because of a "soft" market.) And, given 
    that the standard experience is that 80% of a book's sales happens in the 
    first three months, it's not surprising that the sales are concentrated in 
    that period. In the next period, January-June 1999, the novel had a solid 
    5000-plus sales. Thereafter...
    
    	What usually happens. Within a year after a novel comes out, the sales 
    usually drop right through the floor. Thereafter, sales steadily dwindle 
    away. And, sure enough: in the third and fourth periods, An Oblique 
    Approach sold considerably less than a thousand copies each period -- 835 
    and 795 respectively, showing the expected slow and steady drop.
    
    	It's what happens next that is significant. Because, all other things 
    considered, those "new sales" figures should have kept steadily dropping. 
    Slowly, perhaps, but what most certainly shouldn't have happened is a 
    sudden rise in sales -- and a rise which increases in the next period.
    
    	Nor can this be explained, as the sharp rise in sales of Mother of Demons 
    perhaps can, as the result of me becoming better known as an author. David 
    Drake, not me, is listed as the lead author of An Oblique Approach -- and 
    Dave has been a very well known SF author for at least fifteen years. 
    Granted, my increasing popularity as a writer was undoubtedly responsible 
    for some of that increase. (Just as, for that matter, the fact that Dave's 
    popular Lord of the Isles and With the Lightnings series started coming out 
    during this period and undoubtedly attracted some readers also.)
    
    	But... but...
    
    	Nonsense! Between the January-June 2000 reporting period and the period 
    one year later, the sales for that title -- which had now been out for two 
    years, remember, long past the time when it should have been selling very 
    much -- were suddenly almost 250% higher. (239%, to be precise: 1904 
    compared to 795.)
    
    	What happened in the interim? Well, obviously I can't "prove" it, but it 
    seems blindingly obvious to me that it was the fact that An Oblique 
    Approach went into the Library in the fall of 2000 that explains most of 
    that increase. It would certainly be absurd to claim that being available 
    for free somehow hurt the novel's sales! I can guarantee you that most 
    authors would be delighted to see a two-year-old title suddenly showing a 
    spurt of new sales.
    
    	It's worth noting, by the way, that the second volume in the series, In 
    the Heart of Darkness, shows much the same pattern. In the Heart of 
    Darkness went into the Library at the same time as An Oblique Approach, a 
    year and a half ago. In the last period before it appeared in the Library 
    (Jan-June 2000), Heart of Darkness sold 1,704 copies. A year later, during 
    the equivalent reporting period, it sold 1,886.
    
    	The difference is certainly not as dramatic as the difference in sales of 
    An Oblique Approach, much less the near-doubling of sales which Mother of 
    Demons experienced. Still, the mere fact that sales increased at all 
    instead of declining is significant.
    
    	Before I move on to my next point, I want to take the time to emphasize 
    the significance of these HARD FIGURES. I stress "hard figures" because 
    those people arguing the "encryption/enforcement" side of the debate NEVER 
    come up with hard figures. Harlan Ellison, for instance, screams that he 
    has "Lost sales!" because of piracy -- but, to the best of my knowledge, 
    has never once even tried to demonstrate that this is true. Not once has he 
    done more than endlessly assert the "axiom" that since a title of his was 
    pirated he "must therefore" have lost sales of that title.
    
    	I think my hard figures demonstrate how absurd that claim is. It does not 
    follow that simply because a copy is available for free that sales will 
    therefore be hurt. In fact, they are more likely to be helped, for the 
    simple reason that free copies -- call them "samplers," if you will -- are 
    often the necessary inducement to convince people to buy something.
    
    	Everyone should remember, also, that the titles available for free in the 
    Baen Library -- very much unlike pirated copies -- have the following two 
    unusual characteristics:
    
    	a) They are readily available in a well-known, well-advertised and STABLE 
    web site. I stress "stable" because one of the inevitable characteristics 
    of pirated copies is that trying to find them is a monstrous headache in 
    the first place. For obvious reasons, those addresses tend to disappear 
    constantly. In fact, every time I speak publicly on this issue I urge my 
    audience -- please! be my guest! -- to test my claims by going online and 
    trying to steal one of my titles. (The one you find easily and immediately 
    in the Baen Free Library doesn't count, of course. That one is not 
    pirated.) And I confidently advance the prediction that they will soon 
    discover that the amount of time and hassle they have to go through in 
    order to find a pirated copy somewhere of an Eric Flint title -- again, 
    excepting the legitimate copy available in the Free Library -- is hardly 
    worth the effort.
    
    	b) The titles -- again, very much unlike the typical pirated product -- 
    are in excellent shape, having been professionally prepared, and are 
    available for downloading in no less than five different electronic 
    formats. (For which we even provide the software, if the reader doesn't 
    have it already.)
    
    	Try finding ANY pirated copies of which you can say the same, even if you 
    can find them in the first place. As anyone knows who has ever looked at a 
    pirated edition, as a rule they are very sloppy scanned-and-barely-proofed 
    editions which are miserable to read.
    
    	And yet... and yet... despite the fact that these COMPLETELY LEGITIMATE 
    copies are available for free -- easily, conveniently, and professionally 
    prepared -- you have seen for yourself that in no less than four instances 
    I have been able to demonstrate no discernable financial damage done to me 
    as the author. To the contrary, I have been able to advance a very strong 
    case that the Library has helped the sales of those books.
    
    	2) Since we set up the Free Library, I've received a total of 1,161 
    letters to me as "Librarian." Well over a thousand letters in about a year 
    and a half -- and, at a rough estimate, I'd say that about two-thirds of 
    those letters (certainly well over half) state specifically that, as a 
    result of becoming exposed to an author through the Library, the sender of 
    the letter went out and bought some book of theirs in a print edition. Very 
    often, a number of books.
    
    	I will grant you immediately that this is purely anecdotal evidence. 
    Still, the fact remains that I have well over a THOUSAND anecdotes. How 
    many does Harlan Ellison have, based on which he filed his now-famous (or, 
    in my opinion, notorious) lawsuit? Five? Six? As many as a dozen?
    
    	The thing you should not overlook for a moment is that everyone's argument 
    in this dispute is based entirely on anecdotal evidence. (Except for me, I 
    should say. To the best of my knowledge, I am the only author who has put 
    up free titles and then tracked the actual effect on royalty statements. 
    Still, even there, I will immediately grant that there are a number of 
    variable factors which cloud the issue.)
    
    	The difference is that I can marshal a huge number of anecdotes to support 
    my viewpoint. My opponents can marshal, at most, a handful. And even that 
    handful is suspect, since they base their logic on the assumption that 
    simply because a title has been pirated that the author has therefore "lost 
    sales." I think that assumption is highly dubious -- and is precisely what 
    needs to be proved in the first place. (See my various remarks elsewhere in 
    the Free Library for an expansion on this point.)
    
    	Keep in mind the difference, because it's quite significant. Not all 
    anecdotes are equal. I can point to hundreds of letters where a specific 
    person says specifically: "based on reading Book X in the Library, I went 
    out and bought it." Whereas the anecdotes of my opponents are not specific 
    at all. In essence, what they do is simply demonstrate that someone put up 
    a pirated edition somewhere. Fine. But it does not thereby follow that a 
    SALE was lost. Who knows if the person who downloaded that title would have 
    bought it in the first place? In order for my opponents to have anecdotes 
    which carried the same weight as mine -- even in quality, much less in 
    quantity -- they would have to show statements where a specific person 
    stated that they had intended to buy a copy of Book X but didn't because 
    they found a pirated one instead. If Harlan Ellison has even ONE anecdote 
    of that nature, I'll be surprised.
    
    	3) Here's another anecdote. Last April, I attended an international 
    conference in London on the current state of the e-publishing industry. In 
    general, the tone of the conference was pessimistic -- accurately 
    reflecting the general state of the industry.
    
    	I was invited to come by the organizers more-or-less as the "devil's 
    advocate." In my own remarks at the conference, I stated that the 
    fundamental obstacle to the success of electronic publishing was the 
    industry's obsession with encryption. The only successful electronic outlet 
    I knew at the time -- Fictionwise.com can now be added to the list, from 
    what I can see -- was Baen Books' Webscriptions. And that was precisely due 
    to the fact that Baen made no attempt to encrypt its product. As a result, 
    they were able to sell electronic books both cheaply and with no hassle and 
    aggravation to their customers.
    
    	I measure "successful," by the way, using the only criterion that means 
    much to me as an author: Webscriptions, unlike all other electronic outlets 
    I know of, pays me royalties in substantial amounts. As of now, I've 
    received about $2,140 in electronic royalties from Baen Books for the year 
    2000. (The last period reported.)
    
    	That sum is of course much smaller than my paper edition royalties, but it 
    can hardly be called "peanuts." Every other electronic outlet I know of, in 
    contrast, pays royalties -- if at all -- in two figures. My friend Dave 
    Drake has given me permission to let the public know that his best-earning 
    book published by anyone other than Baen, in one reporting period, earned 
    him $36,000 in royalties for the paper edition -- and $28 for the 
    electronic edition. And that's about typical for even a successful book 
    issued electronically.
    
    	In contrast, Dave earned probably about as much as I did in electronic 
    royalties from Baen for the year 2000. (I don't know the exact figure, but 
    since a lot of my Webscriptions royalties come from titles I co-authored 
    with Dave, I'm sure the amounts are approximately equal.)
    
    	At the conference -- at least in the public sessions -- my remarks were 
    basically greeted with pained silence. But, in private, several publisher 
    representatives told me that they agreed with me -- but also told me that 
    trying to get the publishing industry to give up encryption would be 
    impossible. Why? Basically because the corporate bean-counters who now run 
    most of the publishing industry just can't bear the thought of -- gasp -- 
    GIVING something away for free. Even if it benefits them in the long run.
    
    	There was one exception. A gentleman from a publishing house which 
    primarily produces textbooks rose in support of my point. He stated that, 
    much to their own surprise, his company had found that those textbooks 
    which they made available for free online ALSO had the best sales.
    
    	4) A disconnected anecdote? No, not really. MIT Press discovered the same 
    thing. A friend of mine sent me a letter recently after listening to the 
    President of MIT on a radio talk show. Here is the relevant excerpt from 
    his letter:
    
    	I just have a little more fuel for you to add to the fire. Yesterday on my 
    way home from work I was listening to "All Things Considered" on NPR a 
    little before 5pm CST. They had a story on MIT's offer to create a Web site 
    for most of its classes and to post materials (outlines, detailed class 
    notes, homework assignments, etc) from each course.
    
    	Besides being an interesting story in itself on free information on the 
    net the guest, Charles Vest, president of MIT, as an aside mentioned that 
    when college textbook presses (like the one at MIT) put up free e-text 
    copies of their new textbooks at the same time they published the print 
    version, sales of the print versions went UP.
    
    	If it works to increase the sale for things as over priced as the normal 
    college textbook...
    
    	All right, I'll stop there. I believe I've provided enough evidence to 
    support my point. Making one or a few titles of an author's writings 
    available for free electronically in the Free Library seems to have no 
    other impact, certainly over time, than to increase that author's general 
    audience recognition -- and thereby, indirectly if not directly, the sales 
    of his or her books.
    
    	I believe it also -- I leave it up to each individual to weigh this out 
    for themselves -- places such authors on what you might call the side of 
    the angels in this dispute. For me, at least, this side of the matter is 
    even more important than the practical side. It grates me to see the way 
    powerful corporate interests have been steadily twisting the copyright laws 
    and encroaching on personal liberties in order to shore up their profit 
    margins -- all the more so when their profit problems are a result of their 
    own stupidity and short-sighted greed in the first place.
    
    Eric Flint
    
    
    
    
    
    
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