HELP   |   REGISTER   |   LOGIN
RSS
The Individual Investor Intelligence Network
HOME  |  GLOBAL MACRO  |  MEDIA  |  TECHNOLOGY  |  BIOTECH  |  COMMODITIES  |  EDUCATION  |  IU25 INDEX  |  ABOUT US
Comments
View Comments: Newest First | Oldest First | Threaded View
Page 1 / 3   >   >>
Noreen Seebacher
User Rank
Blogger
Consumer Federation of America
Noreen Seebacher   4/9/2012 12:06:03 PM
NO RATINGS
In a letter to the Senate Committee on Antitrust, Competition Policy and Consumer Protection the Consumer Federation of America  charged that the e-book price-fixing arrangement, entered into by five major book publishers and Apple, is an anticompetitive practice that violates antitrust laws and will cost consumers over $200 million this year. It called on the Committee to look into the issue and support vigorous steps by the Department of Justice to eliminate the practice.  

The letter rejects the claims by publishers and celebrity authors that new books and unknown authors can only be discovered by browsing the shelves of book stores and that setting high prices for e-books, to subsidize physical book distribution, is the only way to ensure there will be enough physical space shelves.  The letter points out that in the digital age there is a much more efficient way for browsers to examine many more books and authors. They can use Internet browsers to search in cyberspace, where they can find not only all the works available from publishers, but hundreds of thousands of authors who have chosen to cut out the publishers as middlemen and sell directly to the public. 

chapAnjou
User Rank
Iron
Re: What about the publishers?
chapAnjou   3/20/2012 9:20:13 AM
NO RATINGS
Scott,

Yes, that's what they're supposed to do (and boy are they good at that), but that's not what my problem with them is.  My problem is that they've positioned themselves as a company that offer these sleek, "life altering" products but, as a company, they run themselves like any other sleazy corporation. Remember the whole iPhone4 debacle when they denied there were any issues with the phones? And then (while still denying there was an issue), telling people that they're holding their phones wrong?  haha

Scott Raynovich
User Rank
Blogger
Re: What about the publishers?
Scott Raynovich   3/19/2012 5:13:27 PM
NO RATINGS
chapAnjou,

Apple gets consumers excited about products. Isn't that what they're supposed to do?

chapAnjou
User Rank
Iron
Re: What about the publishers?
chapAnjou   3/19/2012 12:35:27 PM
NO RATINGS
@Dex & @Value Hiker, I agree with both of you.  The reason I am such an opponent of Apple is because they behave as a cutthroat corporate entity but have this public persona of "giving you things that make you enjoy the beauty of life". 

I'm not naive enough to think that Apple is the only company that does anything along these lines, but that doesn't make it any less disgusting to witness.

chapAnjou
User Rank
Iron
Repercussions? So what?
chapAnjou   3/19/2012 12:29:50 PM
NO RATINGS
"Apple and the five publishing firms have reportedly entered talks with the DOJ to avoid a threatened antitrust lawsuit. Should the agency model be deemed a trust, e-book prices are expected to decline as retailers and publishers are forced to restructure deals."

Great article as usual, Joey. 

I pulled the above quote because it got me thinking about actions and consequences as they pertain to businesses. Let's say the agency model is deemed a trust and apple has to make some kind of reparations...I don't think that would affect Apple in the slightest. They still positioned themselves in the eyes of the public as "the place to go for cheap eBooks".  This foothold on an emerging industry isn't something the DOJ can just wave a wand and watch disappear.

cat tail
User Rank
Platinum
Re: What about the publishers?
cat tail   3/19/2012 12:16:07 AM
NO RATINGS
Maybe the reason  publishing houses want to deal with these pricing issues is because they  all saw what happened to the music industry when digital distribution essentially robbed the record labels of their power and control.

AskAsa
User Rank
Platinum
Re: What about the publishers?
AskAsa   3/18/2012 12:52:53 AM
NO RATINGS
And that's why they do it, right? It's a calculated gamble. Maybe they'll get caught. Maybe they won't. But even if they do get caught, they can easily take the hit. No pain, no gain.

philtheinvestor
User Rank
Iron
Re: What about the publishers?
philtheinvestor   3/15/2012 9:01:42 PM
NO RATINGS
I say WHY NOT... The government seems to 'look into' all companies that get this size for one reason or another. They might as well follow suit and make it someone other than Google so it does not seem to get too lopsided.

Noreen Seebacher
User Rank
Blogger
Loving these tablets
Noreen Seebacher   3/15/2012 1:42:42 PM
NO RATINGS
Price fixing or not, people love these tablets. Tablet shipments grew so strongly in the fourth quarter for both the iPad and the Kindle Fire that research firm IDC has upped its 2012 sales estimates, predicting 18 million more unit sales than it had earlier projected. Globally, fourth-quarter shipments soared more than 50% from the previous period. Apple held a 55% share of the market, compared with 16.8% for Amazon. (Source: CNET/Nanotech blog)

TelecomFreq
User Rank
Platinum
Re: What about the publishers?
TelecomFreq   3/14/2012 11:45:28 AM
NO RATINGS
They prob dont even need to write a check, they could just pay out of pocket cash. If it were a smaller company something like this could crush them, but to Apple they wont even notice it, the punishment should be scalled so its felt.

Page 1 / 3   >   >>




The blogs and comments posted on Investor Uprising do not reflect the views of Investor Uprising, PRNewswire, or its sponsors. Investor Uprising, PRNewswire, and its sponsors do not assume responsibility for any comments, claims, or opinions made by authors and bloggers. They are no substitute for your own research and should not be relied upon for trading or any other purpose.

Latest Blogs
Telecom-equipment maker Ciena is a stock trader’s dream, as long as the timing is correct.
The FTC is offering a $50,000 cash prize to the person or group that can come up with a solution to those annoying robocalls.
Akamai is in the middle of four significant tech trends.
John Malone of Liberty Media will be taking over Sirius XM satellite radio when the existing CEO Mel Karmazin steps down. What's it mean?
Demand for students of the humanities exists, despite widespread aspersions on the discipline.
IU Education
Resources to help you become a better investor
IU Education
Quick Poll
Investor Uprising on Twitter
Investor Uprising on Twiter
Market Chatter
Like Us on Facebook
25 market-moving companies we're tracking
PR Newswire's Terms of Use Apply | Privacy | Contact Us
Copyright © 1996-2013 PR Newswire Association LLC. All Rights Reserved.
A UBM plc company.
PR Newswire