Tag: Ebook Piracy

  • Chanticleer Reviews Magazine sets a First World Wide Record!

    Chanticleer Reviews Magazine sets a First World Wide Record!

    This exciting news is just in from Bookchain, by Scenarex.

    Bookchain® is a brand-new platform bringing a refreshingly flexible way to publish and distribute ebooks, based on blockchain technology.

    Through smart contracts, the platform enables the configuration of the security, trace ability, attribution, and distribution settings of an e-book.

    Bookchain® was specifically designed to fit the different needs of all those involved in the digital publishing industry. They created it to be fully adaptable to the reality of publishers, indie publishers and self-publishing authors.

    And now Bookchain publishes digital magazines on the blockchain!

    Chanticleer Reviews magazine is the first magazine to be published on the blockchain!

    What is so important about blockchain? 

    Blockchain is the foundation of a New Era of the Internet —

    “Publishing is at the epicenter of digital disruption.”Paul Michelman, MIT & MIT Sloan.

     

    Simon-Pierre Marion, CEO of Scenarex and its Bookchain division that is headquartered in Montreal, Canada, has reported to me that

    The Chanticleer Reviews magazine is the very first magazine to be published on the blockchain and using blockchain technology.

    An impromptu celebration for this historic news in publishing!

    [Editorial Note: Even magazines published about the blockchain are not on the blockchain. They are available to download, but they are not available on different devices like our magazine is the one of Bookchain. – kb]

    The Colibrio Reading System that is headquartered in Gothenburg, Sweden, has made this possible with their new innovative Reading System SDK, built on the Modern Web Platform. It is a web first engine, developed using 2019 (and moving into 2020) technologies and practices and built to support new upcoming standards, as well as the current publishing formats. Bookchain uses the Colibrio Reading System.

    “The Colibrio Reader focuses on preserving authors, publishers and designers original visual style. It is the only Digital Reading System which can configure detailed rules for pagination to avoid orphans, widows, split boxes and much more, regardless of document structure and semantics.”  

    Get your history making e-zine today at Bookchain! Click on this link to purchase this special edition Chanticleer Reviews e-zine for $3.99  that features interviews with J.D. Barker, Ron Yates, and celebrates the CIBA 2018 winners.  https://catalogue.bookchain.ca/book/0xb142dc94bba0957512c6731bb2b82af8b95c9c60

    We are going to have our past digital issues of the Chanticleer Reviews magazine published on Bookchain’s platform along with new issues.

    Our advice? Set up your account today with Bookchain! 

    Don’t worry! Bookchain makes it easy. 

    What makes Bookchain’s e-pubs so different?

    Their e-zines and e-pubs are downloadable  on any device! You are not locked into a single device. You alternate devices. Read on your smart phone. Read on desktop. Read on your laptop when you are on the go. The freedom of reading your ebooks on different devices–because it is will be in YOUR LIBRARY that is stored in the super secure blockchain by Bookchain.

    Your library — digitized and portable!

    The first four things to know and understand about the Bookchain selling platform for digital publishing are:

    1. You do NOT need cryptocurrency (aka Bitcoin, etc.) to sign up.
    2. You will NOT be paid in cryptocurrency (unless you want to) if you sell your books on the Bookchain platform.
    3. It is endorsed and underwritten by the Canada Media Fund, NRC, and the Canada Ministry of Economie.
    4. It is secure!

    As an author, the blockchain provides a way for you to securely publish your book and keep control of your digital rights. It allows your published book to be treated more like a physical book, allowing your readers to own the digital book forever (as opposed to being allowed to checkout via Kindle). 

    Thank you, Simon-Pierre Marion and your team at Bookchain, for making this possible. We are excited to be a pioneer in this new age of digital publishing.

    Chanticleer Reviews has always been steeped in technology—thanks to our technology wizard and COO, Argus Brown.  Our “under-the-hood technology” has propelled Chanticleer Reviews “to the ranks of the premier, respected trade reviews in the industry” as quoted from award-winning author, Michael Hurley. Chanticleer Reviews has received the Technology Alliance Group award for our technology platform that helps to increase the digital footprint on the Internet of our reviews and of the Chanticleer International Book Awards winning titles and their authors.

    And that is why we are honored to have Bookchain as an affiliate of Chanticleer Reviews & Media. It is a perfect pairing of content and technology! 

    Bookchain is also a partner member of The Roost at Chanticleer. 

    Now that is something to crow about! 


    Here are some handy links to articles that have been published on the Chanticleer website if you would like to read more about blockchain and the BookChain E-book and magazine distribution platform.

    What is Blockchain? And Why Authors and Publishers Should Care

    PIRACY — Not Just on the High Seas – by award-winning author Susan Faw

    CRYPTOCURRENCY – Protecting Your Coin from Pirates by Award-Winning Author Susan Faw – Cryptocurrency, Book Sales, Book Marketing

  • CHAINING PIRACY: How to Save Your Damsel in Distress – Part 3 by Susan Faw – BlockChain, Book Piracy, Publishing

    CHAINING PIRACY: How to Save Your Damsel in Distress – Part 3 by Susan Faw – BlockChain, Book Piracy, Publishing

    In the days when piracy was the number one concern for seafaring merchants, ships were built with one purpose in mind—to repel attacks from pirates. It was thought that a floating fortress, and a crew as ruthless as those they faced, could protect the cargo stashed in the cavernous holds.

    Painting by Ambroise Louis Garneray

    Bristling with cannons, the Spanish and English galleons were thought to be untakable. The pirates soon convinced them otherwise, but by the time news reached the merchant houses in both nations, ships had been lost or commandeered, and their own guns turned on newly arriving ships. Soon, the pirates had captured so many ships, their flotillas outnumbered those of their prey.

    Human beings were treated and traded as cargo, just as gold or silk, sugar or tea. All were equally valued by pirates, as booty for gain.

    The island of Jamaica is just one example of a place that was populated by the pirate trade. The proceeds of piracy were traded on the market until the pirated cargo could no longer be traced to the stolen goods.

    Today, books are stolen, given a new title and a new cover, and then resold in the publishing industry’s market place.

    Our book baby is all grown up, just waiting to be stolen away by nefarious means, and resold on some island (read market), not of our choosing. How can we, the merchant owner of our books, protect our damsel/damoiseau in distress? How can we keep the pirates from raiding our ships, and stealing our coin?

    Blockchain.

    It is that simple, and that complex.

    What is blockchain, you ask?

    According to Investopedia “blockchain is a distributed, decentralized, public ledger.”

    The block is made up of three distinct structures.

    The first aspect is that the block stores information about transactions, such as the dollar amount of a purchase, and the date and time it was purchased. This information is recorded in a ledger contained within the block.

    The second aspect is that the block records the ‘who’ of the transaction. It keeps a record of the purchaser as a digitally encrypted signature, which is a permanent entry on the ledger.

    The third aspect is that the block records each transaction as a unique feature called a hash. Every transaction within the block has its own unique coding. No two are alike.

    Why is this relevant to your damsel/damoiseau in distress, you ask?

    The biggest risk factor, to the distribution of any form of electronic art, is piracy. That is the ability for that work to be stolen. The oceans of digital publishing are ripe with pirates, who are happy to steal any e-book at any time.

    But they don’t even need to go that far. We practically invite the pirates to steal our work, any time we give away or sell anything on the internet because there is nothing protecting the digital rights of that book. A few words of copyright in a manuscript do nothing to prevent your work from being reproduced in any currently known format, anywhere on the planet.

    Once that book is “out there” there is no getting it back. Bye, bye, sweet damsel! Dare I say it again?  Not to be outdone, you send cease and desist emails to every site that has your book baby illegally uploaded for sale. Of course, they ignore you. The pirate’s code trumps all.

    Blockchain.

    Digitalizing your book into blocks of code, blockchain has the power to prevent your work from being stolen. That pirate ship on the horizon will smack into a reef, impossible to cross. They may try to lob a few cannon shots at your ship, to no avail.

     Book Pirates be Foiled!

    The only way to get to your book IS TO PAY FOR IT. Isn’t that wonderful? What a novel concept, actually being paid for your work.

    “But… what will keep them from reselling it once they have a copy?” you ask.

    Ah, good question. Because blockchain is an encrypted source file, your entire book is encrypted. To access that work, you must have a key, a token, to unlock it. But the token can only be used by the purchaser. It will not work for anyone else. Web-based, blockchain books are read in browsers. Currently, this means that an internet connection is required. The book is owned by the purchaser, but it still exists virtually.

    A book published in blockchain cannot be copied, resold, or redistributed in any manner. It can only be read by the purchaser, using the token given to them on purchase.

    Other advantages to blockchain include being able to create digital limited editions, with serial numbers attached to them to confirm they are truly limited additions. These unique books could contain anything from visual and audio art and files, interviews, etc. Anything that can be digitalized, could become part of this unique format.

    So, a book in blockchain cannot ever be resold?

    Ah, well that power is in your control. As the owner of the rights to distribution (by virtue of it being block chained) you can authorize a book to be resold, under rights and terms that you set. For example, let’s say that a customer bought a $50.00 limited edition from you. You could make it part of the blockchain code that resales are permitted, but that 50% of every resale comes to you. The blockchain, because of the unique coding attached to the original transaction, will know that it is that exact copy being resold and enforce the 50% deposit to your account when the transaction occurs.

    If this is such a wonderful technology, why isn’t everyone using it?

    Blockchain first came into being in 1991. As with all new technologies, it has to be tested and tried, before becoming mainstream. As it moves into its third decade of existence, the world of commerce is paying attention. Start-up companies, such as Bookchain, are cropping up and will be the wave of the future. As more and more of these types of companies appear in the market place, the retail organizations will be forced to adopt the technology.

    I see pressure coming from the big five publishing houses, as they look for better ways to protect their investments.

    Blockchain Could Put Authors At Center of Publishing Universe

    The Alliance of Independent Authors (Chanticleer Reviews is a vetted partner member of ALLi) agrees:

    “If this decentralized technology fulfills its promise, the outcome could be a creator-led publishing industry.

    While indie authors, and the companies that serve them, are a growing presence and power in publishing, large corporate intermediaries such as Amazon still stand between authors and their readers and dominate the self-publishing marketplace. Blockchain tech may help to build the road that leads to true independence for self-publishers.”  April 2018 – London Book Fair

    Change comes with a cost, and the big retailers will be reluctant to embrace such technologies, as they make money off of the pirates as surely as those island ports of old. Change will have to be forced on them.

    E-book piracy can be combated, we only need the sword of technology in hand and move forward.

    Read the first two articles of this series by Susan Faw by clicking the links below: 

     Piracy Not Just on the High Seas  Part 1 of 3 by Susan Faw

    https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/06/14/piracy-not-just-on-the-high-seas-by-award-winning-author-susan-faw/

    CRYPTOCURRENCY – Protecting Your Coin from Pirates  Part 2 of 3 by Susan Faw

    https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/06/29/cryptocurrency-protecting-your-coin-from-pirates-by-award-winning-author-susan-faw-cryptocurrency-book-sales-book-marketing/

    Join us on the High Seas to the New Territories of  DIGITAL BOOK PUBLISHING

    Sailing – making great time! Fair waves and following seas! All is good!

    For more information on Blockchain Technology, read Kiffer and Argus Brown’s article “What is Blockchain? And Why Should Authors and Publishers Care about It.” 

    If you are interested in publishing your works on blockchain, you may want to check out Bookchain by Scenarex.

    The first five things to know and understand about the Bookchain platform are:

    1. You do NOT need cryptocurrency (aka Bitcoin, etc.) to sign up
    2. You will NOT be paid in cryptocurrency (unless you want to be)
    3. It is endorsed and underwritten by the Canada Media Fund, NRC, and the Canada Ministry of Economie.
    4. It is secure! (Or more secure than just about anything on the internet – by design).
    5. Your works can still be available on other selling platforms.

    Bookchain by Scenarex is a vetted partner of the  The Roost at Chanticleer a Community of Authors and Publishers


    Susan Faw is the award-winning author of the Spirit Shield Saga, young adult fantasy and dystopian series.

    You can read her 10 Questions Interview on Book Marketing, Increasing Book Sales with Sharon Anderson here. 

    You can purchase her books on Bookchain and she will get the lion’s share of the booty!

    https://catalogue.bookchain.ca/?author=faw