Friday, August 8, 2014

Top publisher embraces Oyster's and Scribd's Netflix-like services for e-books


Open course books on a desk in a library
Out of the five biggest publishers, HarperCollins was the first one that understood the potential of Nextflix-esque services for e-books like Scribd and Oyster. Simon & Schuster seems to have caught on, though, because it's just agreed to make roughly 10,000 of its digital tomes published at least more than a year ago available on the two aforementioned services. Since three of the Big 5 have yet to sign up, titles from indie and other traditional publications still dominate Scribd's and Oyster's rosters. (Not that we're complaining -- that's a great way to discover books you wouldn't pick up in a store otherwise.) But, this deal adds a ton of popular titles to the mix, including ones written by authors you'll most likely recognize, such as Ray Bradbury, Stephen King, Ernest Hemingway, Hunter S. Thompson and Jodi Picoult. As to how these huge publishers are getting paid, GigaOm says they'll get the same amount as they'd earn from traditional stores once a reader reaches a certain percentage of a book. Thus far, neither service has announced an increase in subscription fee, so it sounds like a great deal for insatiable bookworms.

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