lau wrote:
What I wonder is... will the "tech companies" will bother to acquire "the political savvy to court politicians", or may they just move their operations out of the country that has started the process of imprisoning them?
Ars Technica had a good article suggesting that Republicans made a swing to tech companies when they saw the level of feeling in the SOPA blackout (
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news ... or-gop.ars).
At the same time though, Apple seem quite happy at creating proprietary ecosystems in which authors and users are locked in by laziness, simplicity and the low pricing of their market - even if that annoys some authors (
http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2012/ ... ncerns.ars). But if they ship 1/3 million books in the first three days after launch, with virtually nothing in their inventory, they are not going to be swayed by criticism.
My own printed books have a cover-price of about £15 ($23), with royalties to the author at 12.5%. In reality, the publisher sells at wholesale for as little as £5, which is an income of 60 pence ($1) per copy. I can see a real attraction to sticking the next book on iTunes at $0.99 with a $0.70 income, in the hope that very many more people would buy a copy at 1/23 of the physical print price.
My guess is that the US will probably take a lead on rewriting copyright and selling virtual intellectual property in a market that we can barely conceive yet, a whole new export industry with tiny raw material needs and unlimited output.