Buying "Used" Tutorials
Someone in the GS is selling their entire lampworking set up. One of the things they are selling is what looks to be a big book of tutorials they have paid for and printed out and have put into a binder.
I emailed the seller and asked to buy that book. Then, someone posted in the GS asking if these were tutorials they bought. Is that a "bad thing"? I was under the understanding that it was OKAY to purchase this kind of stuff if the original seller gave up all rights of use. Kinda like when you sell computer software. So, it's not like she is making copies of this stuff and selling off to different people. I think she is just selling ALL of her lampworking supplies and this notebook full of tutorials happens to be one of her "tools". Any thoughts? --Monica |
For the most part selling e-books is a no-no. Selling a real physical book (not just a print off of an E-book) is ok.
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You can't sell software unless it is unopened with the license code never used. In fact, even then it might not be legal ( the courts are still working the issue out)
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And, I was also thinking of it along the lines of a book or magazine. You use it and then give it away or sell it. If it's illegal or even a big enough no no that some of the people on here selling tutorials would be angry about, I won't buy it. I really thought it was something harmless. Thanks for the input. --Monica |
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Besides what she is really asking is what the court of public opinion says. I have read the threads. I wouldn't do it. |
Selling off ebooks would be going against the copyright terms most of us have in our tutorials. Mine has this in it:
This tutorial is for your own personal use so please don't pass it on or share it with anyone. You may print out a copy for yourself. |
Okay, I have another question along this line.
I have a folder filled with photos of beads that I liked and forum threads that explained a particular technique. I also have copies of tutorials that were offered for free from websites, I think Cauldron Creations was one of them. I loaned this folder to a friend of mine when she caught the lampwork bug. I have not passed on anything that I paid for, or had a copyright notation on it, just my inspiration folder. Is this wrong? |
If it is free then I can't imagine it is a problem unless there was a specific provision ( which I doubt)
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Thanks for the responses to my question.
Now I won't have to do a drive-by and steal the folder back.:) |
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I believe that Amy has it right. Transfer of ownership should be one of the items that is covered in the contract terms agreed to at the time of purchase. If not.....The original seller/author may be SOL.
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It's unethical
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interesting.... I'm gonna have to change some wording on the website. I have no problem with people freely sharing the free tutorials that I made, but I do have a problem with them being sold. Other tutorial authors on my website would need to be contacted for permission to share, sell etc... their tutorials.
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My thought is that when you are buying a tutorial you are purchasing the information for your own use, and unlike software you can not uninstall/unlearn the information from your brain. I don't think it is right, legal or ethical to sell this information. Most tutorial I have purchased have a statement that reads basically this information is not to be passed along to anyone other than the original purchaser/ reciever. I saw the GS thread you are refferring to and thought it was wrong for them to be selling it.
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What would be the difference between buying an e-book tutorial and reselling it vs buying printed tutorial book and reselling it?
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Ebooks and other digital media do not have the same Doctrine of First Sale protection that a printed book does.
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I think that as long as someone is getting out of lamp working, it is okay to pass along her printed tutorials to the buyer of her equipment. As long as she doesn't sell them separately. But to give them to whoever buys her setup is reasonable. As long as she doesn't give them to everyone who buys a little piece of equipment or sell them separately. Just my two cents. YMMV.
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If the person is giving up lampworking altogether, is selling the stuff she's printed out on a one-time, this is it, I'm not using this stuff anymore and doesn't keep copies on her computer, I don't see a darned thing wrong with selling the binder. The binder, paper, printer ink all cost her money. I find the idea that you buy it and it disappears forever if you decide never to use it again or keep a copy e-book doctrine very impractical.
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Actually, it looks like the guy who sued Autodesk for the right to sell used CAD software lost in appeal.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vernor_v._Autodesk,_Inc. Personally, I don't agree with the appeal ruling. I believe once you own it, it's yours to do with as you wish, including resell the software (e-book tutorial in the case of our discussion), as long as (like with paper books) you delete it from your computer and won't have access to the material after you've sold it. Of course, this brings on a whole slew of issues, because if you agree with basic "ownership rights" in general, then you can escalate the issue all the way to asking the question "is it ok for people who own pets to abuse them" and of course the answer there is no. "Ownership rights" is a very messy question. It is the main reason why we had to enforce that African Americans and women weren't property, because if you applied ownership rights to them you'd get all sorts of ugly, inhumane situations. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vernor_v._Autodesk,_Inc. and it said it was remanded for further proceedings. Sounds like it's not done yet. |
Ok, fixed the link. Thanks for that!
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Most of the tutorial PDF's I've purchased have this same kind of wording in them. I wouldn't resell them and I wouldn't buy them from anyone other than the original artist/author. |
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I have seen some lampwork teachers who teach techniques they learned in another's class. To me, this is a far more grievous error. |
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Welll, can this be looked at as a breach of contract?
If I, as the buyer, have agreed that I am purchasing a tutorial for my own use and will not sell it to anyone else, then I am agreeing to not sell this to anyone else. Period. The e-tutorial is basically for the one person who purchased it. The buyer doesn't have the authorization to turn around and sell it to someone else, BECAUSE the buyer agreed NOT to sell it to anyone else, that this tutorial is for personal use only. I think this would fall in the same category as if someone bought a hard bound printed book, ran off copies, and then sold those copies to other people. JMHO |
Overall it comes down to what is practical.
1) If the person did not ask the question who would know that the tutorials were sold. 2) If one of the authors were aware of the issue what would they do? 3) Would the author be willing to utilize a copyright lawyer? 4) How much time, energy and dollars is the author willing to use to make their point? |
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