iPad pre-orders begin, along with e-book copyright questions
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| San Francisco
The earliest of the early adopters plunked down anywhere from $500 to $830 Friday to pre-order Apple鈥檚 new iPad, the sleek tablet computer that received lukewarm reviews when it was introduced in January.
But while techies may be eagerly awaiting the iPad's April 3 arrival, the book publishing world may be much less excited, since Apple has announced that the computers will be able to read aloud 鈥渢he contents of any page.鈥
That means that with its VoiceOver technology, the iPad can read 鈥 albeit in one of Apple鈥檚 computerized voices 鈥 all e-books, according to new details released about the device Friday. That is bound to upset many who worry it could eat into sales of audio books.
When Amazon tried to do the same with its Kindle 2 e-book reader, the Author鈥檚 Guild, a writers' advocacy group, questioned whether that amounted to copyright violation.
The Kindle鈥檚 text-to-speech function 鈥減resents a significant challenge to the publishing industry. Audiobooks surpassed $1 billion in sales in 2007; e-book sales are just a small fraction of that,鈥 the guild said in a . 鈥淯ntil this issue is worked out, Amazon may be undermining your audio market as it exploits your e-books."
The same judgment could be made about the iPad. Author鈥檚 Guild Executive Director Paul Aiken told the Wall Street Journal in February 2009 that Amazon to allow its Kindle to read e-books out loud. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 an audio right, which is derivative under copyright law,鈥 he said.
Mr. Aiken was not available Friday to comment on the iPad.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) disagreed with Aiken, saying that the electronic reading of an e-book does not amount to the creation of a derivative work.
鈥淲hile a book read aloud may be useful (or not 鈥 let's remember this is a speech synthesizer, not a human being, reading the book), where is the originality that makes the version read aloud on a Kindle 2 creative, independent of the original book?鈥 the group asked.
But, even if a few iPad readers do opt to have their books read to them by computer software versus a real person, the EFF said that鈥檚 unlikely to hurt the lucrative audio book market.
One group that has praised Apple's new VoiceOver technology is the National Federation of the Blind.
鈥淏lind consumers, like our sighted friends and colleagues, will be able to share in the experience of using this new device from the moment we take it out of the box,鈥 Marc Maurer, the group鈥檚 president, said in a statement.