Showing posts with label DOJ lawsuit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DOJ lawsuit. Show all posts

Friday, September 14, 2012

The DOJ Lawsuit Debate Explained: What's the Big Deal?


The Department of Justice vs Apple and Five Major Publishers lawsuit (and settlement) is a big issue in the publishing world right now. It touches on many aspects of the industry, deals with issues that have no clear answers, and has sparked a lot of arguments.

This lawsuit claims that the traditional publishers colluded to raise e-book prices by changing their bookselling model to the agency version, all at the same time. When they changed their model, Amazon was forced to raise their prices too. That meant Amazon was no longer capable of selling the books below the cost it took to produce, store, and distribute them, which Amazon had been doing for a while with the result of taking a loss while undercutting brick-and-mortar stores that sold for profit.

Those are the basic facts of the lawsuit, but it’s also about more than that. This is a look at the different aspects of the argument, the implications and possible implications of the lawsuit, and what’s got people arguing when they talk about the lawsuit and settlement.


What the DOJ Lawsuit Is Really About

The DOJ lawsuit is about how much voice traditional publishers have in setting the prices of the books they produce. Another way to say this is that this lawsuit is a debate on whether or not Amazon (or other booksellers) should be allowed to price books below the cost of producing and distributing the book.

(Point of argument #1: Some people call this below-cost pricing honest competition, because it brings books to readers at lower prices and allows the consumer to drive the market through choosing the lowest-priced book. Others call it predatory pricing, because it undercuts competitors and pretty much forces them out business when they either have to sell at a loss or lose all their customers.)

The debate could also be described as whether or not we, as buyers, want to move from having brick-and-mortar stores such as Barnes and Nobles and Borders to buying books entirely through online vendors that sell many products, who can afford to take a loss in books (at least in the short-term) because of the profits they make in selling other things. Brick-and-mortar bookstores cannot offer the same low prices, because books are the only things they sell, and anyone with basic addition/subtraction skills can tell you that if you constantly sell all your products at a loss, you'll run out of money really quickly and have to go out of business. Especially since brick-and-mortar stores also have to do things like pay their employees to know books well enough to help customers and to keep their showrooms well-stocked and pretty, while online merchants can throw books in an ugly warehouse between "body socks" and "bungie-jumping rope" and use formulas to recommend and sell books.

(Point of Argument #2: Brick & mortar bookstores may be replaced by online-only stores. Books would then only be sold online or in places that don’t specialize in books, thereby limiting selection and possibly eliminating the bookstore experience. Some people think this is a natural progression of business, while others mourn the loss of the bookstore and the bookstore-browsing experience, which is still one of the main ways readers find new authors: by the 2011 RWA readership statistics, the 3rd most common way.)


Where Traditional Publishers Fit In

It ends up sounding like traditional publishers really have no business interfering; it's a price-war between Barnes and Noble and Amazon, right?

Not quite, because both places get their books from the publishers. And Amazon has, in the past, forced publishers to sign contracts that favor Amazon, by virtue of threatening to not offer the product. Amazon is a major source of revenue for publishers, and the publishers can't afford to have all their books removed from the site. So Amazon gets some books at a lower price than B&N or gets terms that are more favorable to it than B&N gets. (Note that publishers have successfully also used the reverse tactic of not allowing Amazon to sell their books until Amazon agreed to their terms.)


How Self-Publishing Fits In

Why would publishers keep trying to sell through B&N, when so much revenue comes through Amazon anyway? Because the publishers are already suffering due to the competition from self-publishing, with the rise of the cheap self-published e-book.

This is the only place that self-publishing is involved: the timing of the lawsuit comes at a time when publishers are already struggling.


Where Authors and Readers Fit In

Books published by traditional publishers are more expensive than self-published books because the publishers invest more in the author and the services for the author, such as professional editing and cover designs and advances. Yet, as the traditional publishers have to tighten their belts because of the increased competition, they also end up cutting corners. The tighter the belt, the less they can offer authors.

Meanwhile, Amazon, with its larger pool of resources, has begun to offer traditional publishing services. So Amazon suddenly has an interest in other traditional publishers taking a hit. If other major traditional publishing companies fail or appear to be failing, then new authors who want to go the traditional publishing route will be more likely to go to Amazon than to the struggling publishers, because Amazon--thanks to its diverse markets--can continue to offer the services the other publishers are starting to skimp on.

The more quality and best-selling authors Amazon signs, the more readers will consider them a legitimate publisher. The more readers who begin to look for the Amazon Publishing releases for new, high-quality, traditionally-published writers, the more Amazon takes over the role that the Big Six of traditional publishing used to play.


Back to Competition

In my evaluation, Amazon can out-compete other traditional publishers. I don't really see any way around that outcome unless traditional publishers successfully change their business plan to something new and entirely different. Specialized companies usually do get out-competed by diverse operations; diversification is a financially sound business decision. Amazon's biggest competition worry with this business plan is that another supergiant retailer will start picking up the same tactics (although none have so far*).

*Purely personal prediction, but I'd say that Apple is probably the biggest threat, having already tested the waters of offering self-publishing and being a major retailer of devices on which people can read e-books. Other digital media companies are probably close-runners up, and I wouldn't be terribly surprised to see, say, Google stepping into the market in the future.

(Point of Argument #3: Authors aren’t sure whether or not their current publishers will survive. If there are no other publishers besides Amazon, authors may not have any choices on the terms of the contracts they sign. While the terms may be great right now, if Amazon becomes the only option, writers fear the terms will become unfavorable in the future, because there will be nowhere else writers can go for traditional-style publishing. Others argue that of course new publishers will crop up, or old publishers will finally change terms that many have felt were unfair to authors anyway.)


What the Lawsuit Is NOT

What the lawsuit isn't, is a comparison of self-publishing and traditional publishing. Self-published authors always set their own prices (within certain bounds). Amazon doesn't go around habitually offering the same self-published book on KDP cheaper than Barnes and Noble does on PubIt!; most authors sign contracts agreeing to not offer lower rates on other mediums, so the price is more or less consistent among the different markets.

Yes, the two issues are tangentially related. The coincidence of their timing makes a very large difference in the traditional publishers' resources. But it’s not the argument involved in the DOJ lawsuit.


The Real Argument: What’s Best in the Long Term?

The DOJ lawsuit is actually a case that is trying to interpret the definition of competition. Is allowing one company to offer the lowest prices by subsidizing their losses through other sales good for competition? Or does it hurt competition by cutting out other companies' ability to thrive?

I don't question that allowing Amazon to offer lower prices to consumers is better for consumers in the short-term, or that the publishers forcing Amazon to raise their prices through switching their business model was irritating. Heck, I like saving money. I certainly don't like when prices go up. But it's not the short-term consequences that have people riled about the issue.

What all the points of argument are trying to get at is this: Whether or not it benefits consumers and authors in the long-term remains to be seen.

If Amazon never raises prices, other diversified companies enter the market, or traditional publishers work together with non-Amazon book retailers to create alternate business plans that allow both to make a profit while offering prices as low as Amazon (and assuming Amazon does not lower their prices even further), then yes, the settlement and the DOJ winning the lawsuit against the publishers might be best for the consumers. Any one of those three options might turn the short-term benefits to consumers into long-term benefits. But none of those scenarios are guaranteed, and there's no hint that they are happening yet. And that's what has people up in arms about the DOJ lawsuit.

What do you think about the DOJ's lawsuit? How do you think the publishing industry will change? Would it be good for consumers in the long run if the DOJ wins, and why?

Monday, September 10, 2012

The DOJ vs Apple & Publishers: Links to date

A rehash of the DOJ vs Apple & Publishers case, just in case anyone is interested in studying how it began and how it has been playing out, or reviewing it from start to current. Snippets in block quotes are taken from my publishing news posts, which go up every other Friday, for timeline purposes and to explain what the articles are about; most links are straight from those snippets.

Plaintiff: U.S. Department of Justice
 Defendants: Apple, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, Penguin, Hachette, and HarperCollins
       (*Random House not included in the lawsuit)

Timeline

Feb 4, 2010
Hachette Book Group Switches to Agency Model (Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, HarperCollins, and Penguin also do so in the same year. All five enter Most Favored Nation clause with Apple.)

February 28, 2011

Random House Switches to Agency Model (last publisher to do so)

August 9, 2011
First lawsuits filed. (No link)

August 19, 2011:
More Lawsuits Over Agency Model

December 9, 2011:
U.S. Department of Justice is looking at mutli-agency ebook pricing deals.
From Friday, Dec 16, 2011:
"At the same time, the U.S. Department of Justice is looking at mutli-agency ebook pricing deals. (Dec 9) That's right, a bunch of publishers suddenly moved over to the agency model at the same time, and began setting identical pricing. Price matching across companies is legally discouraged (as in, there's a class-action lawsuit hitting the publishers right now for this practice). This is based on the idea that price matching discourages competition, which is anathema in a free-market economy. The DOJ has extended the deadline to resolve this issue, so it's something that will continue to be discussed in 2012. Oh, and the EU is looking into the same thing."


January 21, 2012:
Amended Price Fixing Complaint Ramps up Pressure on Publishers, Apple
From Friday, January 27
The saga of the lawsuit against publishers for price-fixing continues. The newest consolidation of claims does not target either RandomHouse or Amazon; those accused are Apple, HarperCollins, Penguin, Hachette, Simon & Schuster, and Macmillan. The suit asserts that the price-fixing between the major publishers targeted has "driven up the cost of e-books by as much as 50%." Amazon cites evidence of being approached by the 5 companies individually with threats to unlist e-book titles if they didn't capitulate to raising their e-book prices.

March 8, 2012
Justice Department May Sue Apple, Five Major Houses
From Friday, March 9, 2012
The Department of Justice warns Apple and Penguin, Hachette Book Group, Macmillan, HarperCollins, and Simon & Schuster that they will go ahead with the anti-trust lawsuit over eBook price fixing. No surprises here - they've just now been officially warned.


March 30, 2012
E-books settlement talks advancing: sources


April 2, 2012
DOJ May Be Close to Settling with Apple (edit from September: *snicker!* Yeah, we got that one wrong.)
From Friday, April 12, 2012
The DoJ is close to settling with Apple over price-fixing. This settlement may end Apple's "most-favored-nation" status. The deal may also shift pricing control from publishers to retailers, which is a move away from the agency model publishers have been using and back towards Amazon's wholesale model. Good news for Amazon.

April 11, 2012
Justice Dept. Files Suit Against Apple, Publishers Over E-book Pricing
DOJ Announces Three E-book Settlements, But Not With Apple
The Broad Strokes of the Hachette, HarperCollins, and S&S Price-Fixing Settlement
Tor.com President John Sargent issues official statement on Tor blog

April 12, 2012
DOJ is Likely to Lose E-book Antitrust Suit Targeting Apple 
 From Friday, April 20, 2012:
The DOJ has officially filed an antitrust lawsuit over e-book pricing against Apple and 5 of the Big Six publishers (but not Random House). HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, and Hachette Group will be agreeing to a settlement in the DOJ vs. Big Five and Apple case. Apple, Macmillan, and Penguin will be fighting the antitrust charges in court. The terms of the settlement are quite a hassle, although they don't necessarily mean an end to the agency model - just the ability of publishers to set the prices, which is why the publishers wanted the agency model in the first place. CNET analyzes the case and suggests that it's not likely that the charges will stand against Apple, even if they do against the publishers. CEO of MacMillan, John Sargent, posts his statement on the issue on Tor.com. Amazon intends to lower prices on eBooks again....

The Short Version of DOJ against five major publishers and Apple:
When Amazon began selling eBooks at a loss, they gained almost 90% of the market. Shortly thereafter, five publishing houses and Apple each approached Amazon and pretty much said they wouldn't let Amazon sell their books if Amazon didn't switch to the "agency model" of pricing. This raised eBook prices, because it meant the publishers would be setting the prices instead of the retailers. Ironically, this earned the publishers less money per book than the "wholesale model" that allowed retailers to set the prices, as Amazon was absorbing the initial loss under the wholesale model. But since Amazon could use sales from their other markets absorb the cost of selling eBooks at a loss, Amazon began to dominate the market. Since the implementation of the agency model, Amazon has declined to about 60% of the eBook market, allowing other sellers (such as Apple and Barnes & Noble) to compete. Then the Department of Justice filed a antitrust lawsuit against Apple and the five publishers who demanded the agency pricing, on grounds that they colluded in an anti-competitive way to raise the price of eBooks. Amazon has come out and said the first thing they intend to do is lower prices on eBooks as soon as they can.

More related articles: US sues to lower prices of best-seller e-books, E-book antitrust suit against Apple a win for Amazon, and Speculation abounds that Amazon triggered e-book lawsuit. All three have a bias against Amazon (which is something to keep in mind when reading them), but they do give implications on how the ruling may affect the industry as a whole.

Amazon does give grants to independent booksellers and publishers adding up to a total of about $1 million. There's a long list tucked away on their page of their beneficiaries. Recipients say the grants are crucial to staying in business, but critics speculate on the possibility of Amazon using the grants to buy off independent publishers. It can't be denied that Amazon has been crucial to keeping some of these independent publishers in business, though.

 May 15, 2012
Apple Loses Motion to Dismiss Ebook Antitrust Suit
 From Friday, May 18, 2012
The DOJ rejects the motion to dismiss the class-action suit against Apple and 5 publishers for price-fixing. This is despite the settlement the DOJ has already reached with 3 of the publishers. (There's a shorter article here; these are not two separate cases but simply a motion to dismiss this single one, which I felt wasn't quite clear in the first article.)

May 31, 2012
Penguin and Macmillan Reject Price Fixing Charges 
From Friday, June 1, 2012
Penguin challenges the DOJ's claim that they conspired with four other major publishers and Apple to set prices, pointing out flaws in the DOJ's arguments and the weakness of evidence against them. Macmillan and Apple also intend to go to fight the lawsuit in court.

June 7, 2012
Barnes & Noble Urges Court to Reject DoJ's Price-Fixing Settlement
From Friday, June 15, 2012
Barnes & Noble urges the DOJ to reject the settlements of 3 big publishers over the price-fixing lawsuit, saying that the settlements are not in the public's best interest and that there is no factual basis that the settlements will actually address the issues raised by the lawsuit.

 June 25, 2012
Indie Publishers Push Back Agency Model, Criticize DoJ Deal

June 26, 2012
Readerlink Predicts DoJ Deal Will Lead to the 'Systematic Elimination of Competition'
Authors Guild Sees Return of Predatory Pricing if DoJ Deal Stands
From Friday, June 29, 2012
The Authors Guild, nine indie publishers, and Readerlink (a wholesaler) all submit protests to the DOJ against the settlements with Hachette, HarperCollins, and Simon & Schuster, based on the idea that the settlements will encourage predatory pricing by Amazon and will eliminate competition.


July 12, 2012
DOJ Misses Deadline to Post 800 Public Letters
From Friday July 13, 2012
The DOJ misses the deadline to publish 800 letters on the proposed e-book pricing settlement. With a stack this large, it hasn't been possible to read them all. They expect to have them posted by July 20, but question has arisen as to whether the delay violates the Tumney Act that gives the public the right to weigh in on decisions before the decisions are accepted by court.

July 23, 2012
Department of Justice Responds to Public Comments
Response of Plaintiff United States to Public Comments on the Proposed Final Judgement (Scribd file)
DOJ Highlights Letter from Self-Published Authors
DOJ Reviews Comments, Says E-book Deal to Go Ahead

July 26, 2012
Penguin Lodges Appeal in E-book Consumer Case 
From Friday, July 27, 2012
The DOJ begins responding to the letters from the public on the price-fixing lawsuit. Standing by their decision, they respond to Barnes and Nobles letter of protest and a letter from self-published writers in agreement, among others, and is generally dismissive of all claims that the settlement might be a bad idea, pointing out that claims that it will hinder competition are highly speculative. Penguin launches an appeal on the case, but is denied. 

August 13, 2012
Attorney Asks DOJ to Release Findings on Amazon's "Predatory" Ebook Pricing

August 15, 2012
Apple Says DOJ's E-book Proposed Settlement is "Fundamentally Unfair"

August 16, 2012
Apple, Publishers File Opposition to Proposed DOJ Settlement

August 23, 2012
DOJ Defends Settlement Against 'Ruinous Competition' Charges
 From Friday, August 24, 2012
Music industry attorney Bob Kohn asks permission to weigh in on the DOJ vs. Apple and Publishers case.. He includes the fact that even the DOJ admitted that Amazon was using predatory pricing, and asks the DOJ to release its findings.
Apple protests the DOJ's proposed settlement as unfair, including pointing out that the DOJ is attempting to rewrite their contracts with the affected party before even hearing any evidence, despite Apple never participating in the settlement. It also accuses Amazon of being a monopolist and driving the DOJ's investigation. (Also see PW article for more.)...

The DOJ defends its settlement, comparing publishers to railroads and other companies.


August 29, 2012
Court Will Allow More Five Page Amicus Briefs in E-book Case


August 30, 2012
Publishers to Pay $69M in eBook Pricing Settlement (Not DOJ but separate state lawsuits)


August 31, 2012
Checks, or Credit: The Broad Strokes of the States' E-book Settlement (Not DOJ but separate state lawsuits)


September 4, 2012
A Work of Art: Bob Kohn Submits DoJ Amicus Brief as Comic Strip


September 5, 2012
U.S. Attorneys Are Not Impressed by Bob Kohn's Comic Brief

September 6, 2012
Judge Approves E-Book Pricing Settlement Between Government and Publishers 
From Friday September 7, 2012
HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, and Hachette are to pay $69 million in a settlement with state attorneys. This lawsuit parallels the DOJ vs Apple and Publishers one, but is not the same suit, because it's between the attorney generals and the publishers. Breakdown of who will pay what, for which books, is here. The money will be paid to the customers, not to the state attorneys.

Bob Kohn, music industry attorney who weighed in on the DOJ vs Apple and Publishers lawsuit, was submitted a 25-page amicus brief. The court decided this was too long and required him to resubmit it as a 5-page brief. So Kohn resubmitted it in comic form. The US attorneys were not impressed, responding in 5 paragraphs without addressing all of Kohn's points, and are urging the judge on the case to hurry up and submit a final judgement.

And, on Sept. 6, the judge did formally approve the settlement entered into by Simon & Schuster, Hachette, and HarperCollins with the DOJ. That still leaves Apple, Penguin Group, and Macmillan going to trial next summer. 


 Okay, as of Monday morning that's the current run-down. (Also, if you thought you noted that "e-book" comes in every capitalization/hyphenation imaginable, you were correct. I tried to keep the articles' spellings. I myself switched from eBook to e-book over the course of the year before settling on the latter, so you may see that, as well.)

What are your thoughts on the case?