Echohawk
Shirokinukatsukami fan
Sure, I understand that. What you are describing is the legal right to transform something you have purchased into another format. It makes sense that if you put the effort into transforming something you own into some other form, that you should be entitled to do so, and that you also be entitled to use that transformed work however you want (as long as you don't share it).No, you really do have the legal right to change your media from any format to any other format(with all the advantages and disadvantages of each), if you are capable of making the transfer. If 3d books come out in the future, I'm allowed to change my hardcover books into 3d books, even if I didn't pay extra for the 3d version.
But that doesn't equate to a legal right to automatically "have" the work in a different format (unless you transform it yourself). Buying a book doesn't give you a legal right to download the PDF of that book. It doesn't give you the legal right to download an audio book version of the same work. It doesn't give you the legal right to download the movie of the book.
It is quite possible to be of the opinion that consumers should, morally, gain the right to download a book in a different format once they have purchased it. But legally, the only right you gain is the right to transform the work into a different format yourself.
Yes, I admit that if we're talking purely man hours, that it costs around 300 bucks to pay someone to do it. But it only needs to be done once and then sold to everyone who buys it. If you add a dollar to the price and sell 300 copies of it, you've already made your money back.
I think that WotC's PDFs are currently overpriced, and would love to see some mechanism for owners of the printed books to get a cheaper PDF. However, I have a bit of a moral problem with the line of thought that says "because the PDFs are overpriced, that makes it okay to download illegal copies, which I wouldn't do if they only cost $1". (I realise that you didn't say that at all Majoru Oakheart -- I'm just paraphrasing what seems to be the philosophy of some posters, and borrowing your $1 price point to make the point.)
I'd really like to see WotC reexplore the idea of a PDF activation code in the printed books, possibly linking that to a DDI subscription to try to reduce fraud. I know that there are several logistical problems inherent in that model, but it seems like the right way to go in the long-term.