I guess this means that they will outlaw the library system?
In some schools, the cost of books is actualy more than the cost of classes. This was the case when I was in community colledge...$50 per credit hour, but every 3-credit-hour course needed at least one $150 (used price) book!
On top of that, many new text books include CD/DVD media that does nothing to help the student learn. However, you are not allowed to sell these disks (even if you never used them), and you cannot sell the book without the disks! Thus, you cannot get the book used and you cannot sell it when you are done with it!
Just like the movie, music, and game industries, the inefficient and outdated principals that govern the print text media are driving down sales whenever there is any alternative to their monopoly. Rather than compete, the first strategy (that always fails) is always to try to stop the alternatives that are only slightly profitable. When this fails, they will start releasing these books as overpriced Kindle books that cost more than a new textbook...this will also fail. Then they will start sueing individual users as a scare tactic...and this will fail as well. In the end, customers who would have been willing to pay $100 for a book that costed $5 to print will simply start downloading the books for free. The executives and lawyers that did everything in their power to make this happen will then be able to sit back and say "It's not my fault that we are loosing money...it's because of the pirates. If all the pirates bought our books for $500 each, then we would have lots of money"
Personaly, I would love to see universities go to public domain text books...but there is too much bribe money floating around for that to happen.
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