Webscriptions

Webscriptions

Webscriptions was originally an e-publishing experiment organized both to test the e-publishing market place and as a test of Jim Baen's controversial assumptions in Digital Rights Management (DRM) launched by arrangement (contract, not jointly) in 1999 by Jim Baen, publisher and editor-in-chief of Baen Books together with his web services consultant and provider Arnold Bailey, of Webwrights [http://www.webwrights.com 1] , the principal company of which is a computer services business that in this manner also came to sell e-books of books, becoming in essence, an e-publisher by customer request. __NOTOC__

Baen's stance on DRM is simple, and at odds with most distributors of intellectual content, including the music industry: Provide good materials at a reasonable and fair price, encryption discourages use and purchase, so none of that, and the same for copy protection. Hence Bailey, accommodating his customer came to offer five common e-formats including some which are word processor compatible. Further, once you've purchased the item, you can return and download it again at any later time, even in a different format.

Webscription services

Webscriptions is owned and operated by [http://www.webwrights.com Webwrights] , a company which also runs Baen Books' website and the Baen's conference website Baen's Bar. Initially, the e-books offered were solely titles published by Baen Books, but in recent years webwrights, Inc. has picked up titles from other publishers and publishing houses as the Electronic marketing strategy adopted by Jim Baen and his company proved it's worth and hardcopy sales increased considerably. Other publishers had to take note. At the same time, the e-business income raised revenues for publishers, and indirectly increased Baen Books's market share, particularly by increasing the number of hardcover books sold per release. Part of that growth, is due to the Baen Free Library which was launched nearly hand in hand with Baen's new e-books. The Baen Free Library is just that—about 100 titles that can be downloaded at no charge from Webscriptions in the same unprotected formats, allowing the customer to sample the wares, or read it as if found in the local public lending library.

The Tennessee company that operates webscriptions, "Webwrights", is a separate business entity that also does internet services consulting for fees. One of the services it provides is it manages and operates the popular internet forum Baen's Bar. In the strictest sense, "Webscriptions" really refers to the Baen Books decision to bundle parts of 4–5 books "per month" as e-ARC releases purchased as a subscription. [cite web|title=Baen webscriptions FAQ page|url=http://www.baen.com/ws_faq.htm|accessdate=2007-12-06] "Webscriptions.net" is the Baen Books entry point into the Webwrights operated e-publisher "Webscriptions" (dot net). >cite web
title=baen relationship stuff|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3AFabartus&diff=175865947&oldid=175745779|accessdate=2007-12-06
quote="webscriptions is Arnold Bailey's company. He has a contract with Baen to provide web services to Baen, to provide the production process for webscriptions, to take the money for webscriptions and pays baen their cut of the take. Arnold keeps a percentage, which I know, but don't think I'm authorized to share, off the top of the webscriptions sales. In exchange for that, he runs the bar, runs and develops Baen's other web sites, and runs the free library stuff."|author=16writ|Rick|Boatright
]

Baen's Webscriptions' primary goal was to increase sales of normal books at the time when majority considered that making an e-book available would crash the market for books. According to the declarations of people involved with this project [http://www.learningfountain.com/baensbar.htm] , most notably Eric Flint [http://www.baen.com/library/palaver_index.htm] whom Baen referred to as "Baen's Bulldog" on DRM rights issues, it has proven to be a significant success, increasing Baen's sales of printed books as well as generating additional income from e-books, which are "technically" published by webwrights, not Baen's.

The success of the site through the "Baen's filter or front-end" has also been described by New York Times. The project has been called 'innovative' by Wired [http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,42350,00.html] and New York Times and met with generally positive reception from many authors (examples: Charles Stross [http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-old/2006/02/] , David Drake [http://david-drake.com/newsarchive/news32.html] ) and general public [http://www.alexa.com/data/details/main?q=&url=www.baen.com/library] . Baen currently is following the Webscriptions with another experiment in online publishing - an online subscription based sci-fi magazine, Jim Baen's Universe, which non-subscribers can purchase single copies through Webscriptions. This follows the experimental [e-zine] that is now paying Pro-rates, The Grantville Gazettes, and Eric Flint, Baen's Bulldog on DRM matters, is editor-in-chief of both entities. Additionally, through an arrangement set up with Jim Baen, all the Baen titles at webscriptions are free to the disabled [http://www.risfc.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=511] , though this does not hold for other publishers contracted with Bailey's webwrights. Bailey himself is inclined to favor DRM policies at odds with those of Flint, the late Jim Baen, or current editor in-chief and publisher at Baen's Books, Toni Weisskopf.

Webscriptions is different from most other online e-book selling ventures in that books are sold individually as well as in the Baen Webscriptions bundled and serialized packets of four or five books together. Webscriptions keeps the Baen bundles available on line, though the subscription price is slightly better—an incentive perhaps from the publisher to commit, but one which Baen barflies argued should be priced higher—an interesting demand from customers to say the least—Jim Baen eventually complied.

Each month, four to six as of yet unpublished works are made available for purchase as a group. The books are released incrementally. Three months before their official release date, only the first half of the books are available for download. Two months before their official release, the first three quarters of the books are available. The complete books are available for download a month before they are released in paper form.

Note that while the books are only partially available ('Advanced Readers Copy'), the only download format is HTML, however once the books are complete, they can be downloaded in multiple e-book formats including Rocketbook, RTF, Mobipocket, Microsoft Reader, and HTML. None of the e-books has any Digital Rights Management parts. This has caused some concerns among certain publishers and authors. Tor Books began making books available via Webscriptions in March 2006, but pulled it within days because of pressure from the owning group, Holtzbrinck because of concerns regarding the lack of DRM, over Tor Books' protests. [http://words.grendel.at/archives/2006/04/05/idiocy_wins.html] The matter was satisfactorily resolved though, and TOR joined DAW as the third large science-fiction publisher using the services. [ [http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6482534.html?nid=2286&source=title&rid=1906489783 Publishers weekly, "Tor Inks Deal", September 2007, accessed:2007-12-10] ]

References and Notes

External links

* [http://www.webscription.net/ WebScription.net Homepage]
* [http://www.baen.com/ws_faq.htm Baen Webscriptions FAQ]
* [http://www.allensmith.net/SciFi/Baen/Monthly.htm Annotated Monthly WebScriptions Listing]
* [http://www.namesatwork.com/blog/2006/04/03/timeline-of-rss-book-publishing/ Webscriptions as a milestone on Timeline of RSS Book Publishing]
* Various authors discussing Webscriptions: Charles Stross [http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-old/2006/02/] , David Drake [http://david-drake.com/newsarchive/news32.html]

Notes


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