Sunday, April 12, 2009

Wizards, PDFs and Piracy

Recently WotC has announced that it was going to shut down its sales of PDFs due to piracy. I think there are two flaws in the logic they are basing their actions on.
The first it would seem is the assumption on the part of WotC is that the piracy occurs because they made the product available digitally. However my experience is that the product will become so no matter if WotC makes it digital or not. Given that I have pretty good evidence that piracy occurs way up their logistical train I think it is safe to say that PDFs or no PDFs WotC will get pirated.

I think the second flaw in the logic is that reducing piracy will increase sales. It only increases sales when the customer has a legitimate way to obtain the product in the new format. That is the problem that the recording industry faced. The record companies were so asleep at the wheel that they did not see the MP3 coming and it took them about 2 years to find out what happened to their CD sales. Essentially CDs had become obsolete and there was no way to obtain MP3s legally. Now there are outlets like i-tunes and this has given legitimate buyers a place to obtain music in the latest format. The paper world is just slower. CD to MP3 happened fast because it was digital to digital. Publishing is lagging a little because it still is largely paper to digital. Publishing has gone digital on the production side but not entirely on the distribution side. Thus it is easy for publishers to make a digital product but their logistics are such that they are still tied to paper for profit.

Though what I suspect has happened is that WotC has decided that they actually can do better at electronic sales if they are the sole source. After all they have the records of the sales and know the numbers and how much they a loosing to the middle men One Bookshelf and Paizo. Suing the people that distributed PHB II might be part of the same move for a different reason.

In conclusion I think that WotC will loose sales from this move until they have a way for people to obtain their content legitimately. Until then I suspect that electronic piracy of their products will undoubtedly increase.

2 comments:

trollsmyth said...

The other factor causing PDFs to lag behind MP3s is usability. Listening to an MP3 on an iPod or your computer is not noticeably different from listening to it on your stereo or walkman. However, until Amazon perfects the Kindle, dead-tree print will retain it's superiority to PDFs for text's primary purpose. Reading a PDF on a computer, even a laptop, isn't as convenient as a book. Computers lag behind books in terms of weight, power usage, screen-glare, and durability.

Still, I think the PDF's time will come, though by then it will likely be in a digital format superior to the PDF, just as MP3s are superior to CD files.

Kevin Mac said...

I love the PDF movement, although I have not brought myself to buy anything yet. I get tempted to buy a monster or treasure assortment or whatnot - but usually I realize it is stuff I can come up with fairly quick on my own after 30 years of D&D DM'ing..

But I really need to pick up some of the old modules and such that are available online - always good reading even if I don't use them. And so cheap. I like having a book in my hands, but printed sheets is OK too.