According to a firm’s annual Digital Entertainment Survey, a single in 8 women over age 35 who owns an e-reader admits to carrying downloaded an bootleg chronicle of an e-book. That compares to only a single in twenty women in a same age organisation who admits to carrying pirated music.

If copyright transgression is in truth apropos some-more renouned between an age organisation that’s never unequivocally participated in digital piracy, that’s positively bad headlines for publishers, who The Guardian surmises “fear they could humour a identical predestine to a jot down labels which have struggled to reinstate mislaid earthy sales.”

After all, it isn’t only women over 35 which have been putting unlawful calm upon their e-readers. Across all ages as well as both genders, a little 29% of e-reader owners certified which they bandit books. And for inscription owners, which series is even aloft – 36%. It doesn’t stop there: 25% of these people pronounced they programmed to go on to download pirated material.

Their reasons for you do so have been varied: e-book prices, for example, already owning the same book in print, as well as a miss of accessibility of e-book titles in sure countries.

E-Books: The New Napster?

The High Low suggests this creates e-books “the latest Napster,” as digital books turn as renouned as well as as novel (no joke intended) as mp3s were fifteen years ago. But there might be a integrate of pass differences here. With Napster, it was mostly only a strain or dual which was downloaded, not an complete album. With books, people aren’t pirating chapters. Moreover, distinct Napster there isn’t unequivocally a single transparent go-to site where people can find unlawful books, as well as there might be no transparent authorised aim as there was in a box of a music-sharing site.

The subject remains, however, if a augmenting recognition as well as sales of tablets as well as e-readers will meant which digital e-book robbery rises accordingly.

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