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Amazon v. Sony, et.al., in War of the eBook Giants

By David Weir | Aug 18, 2009

The recent decision by Sony to drop its proprietary publishing platform in favor of the open ePub platform for digital books represents a turning point in the rapid development of the eBook publishing industry. It further isolates Amazon among the biggest players, with more moves in what has become a crowded field expected soon.

“It’s a big deal,” confirmed Mark Coker, CEO of Smashwords, digital the self-publishing company. “Sony has supported ePub in Europe for some time, (but) here in the U.S., they’ve been selling in their own encrypted BBeB format. So now you have two of the big three eBook retailers (Sony and Barnes & Noble) putting their weight behind ePub.”

Other important players in this space include Google and soon (according to unconfirmed reports) Apple. As Coker points out, this move “expands the opportunity for Sony to sell eBooks not just for reading on the Sony Reader, but for any device or app supporting ePub. Smart move by Sony.”

For the past few quarters, we’ve been reporting explosive growth for eBooks, while the traditional book publishing industry continues to stagnate. Even with triple-digit growth, however, the overwhelming percentage of books sold are still the nice, old-familiar type.

But that is changing fast, as we’ve documented numerous times here at Bnet Media, and the true significance of Sony’s ePub — from an industry perspective — is that it brings us one step closer to an industry-wide, open standard. As Brad Stone reported in The New York Times last week, if rumors of Apple’s impending entry into this field prove true (and I have reason to believe they will; otherwise I would not repeat a rumor), the pressure on Amazon to stick with its proprietary platform will become all the greater.

So sit back and get ready to watch a true “War of the New Media Giants” — Amazon v. Sony, and Google, and Apple and more — coming to any eReader screen near you soon.

In addition to serving as a BNET Media analyst/blogger, David Weir is a veteran journalist and the author of several books. Weir is a co-founder and vice-president of the Center for Investigative Reporting, as well as an editorial board member of The Nation.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • With Sony’s ePub Move, Adobe Wins

    GigaOm - 103 days 30 minutes ago

    Sony’s announcement today that it’s throwing open the doors of its e-book store and reading devices to the ePub standard is certainly good news for consumers. ePub — and open standard developed by the International Digital Publishing Form — is already supported by a growing number of major publishers and a growing number of reading...

  • Google Sides Against Amazon in eBook Format Wars

    PC World - 89 days 13 hours 5 minutes ago

    Google says it will distribute millions of its public domain eBooks as ePub downloads, the open format that Sony supports

  • Sony takes Reader openness one step further, will offer EPUB titles only

    Engadget - 103 days 14 hours 43 minutes ago

    Slowly but surely, the mega-corp who has historically clung tight to its own formats while the world opts for others is finally seeing the light. Just over a year after Sony pushed out an update that enabled its Reader to use purchased books in the open EPUB format, the outfit is now promising to sell digital books only in that format by the...

  • Sony, of All Companies, to Ditch Proprietary eBook Formats [Ebooks]

    Gizmodo - 103 days 23 hours 31 minutes ago

    Copy this whole post to another site Sony, which we've blasted in the past for an insistence on proprietary formats, will support the open standard ePub format for its ebook readers. Open, of course, doesn't mean "free of DRM": This is really a jab at Amazon. ePub, a format created by Random House and a network of other publishers, is designed...

  • Sony Adopts Open (But Still DRMed) Format for eBooks

    ReadWriteWeb - 103 days 9 hours 58 minutes ago

    In a move that took most industry pundits by surprise, Sony today announced that it will adopt the open ePub standard as the default format for books in its eBook store by the end of the year. EPub is an XML-based standard for publishing eBooks that has been adopted by a wide variety of hardware manufacturers, publishers, and retailers - with...

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  •  
    1

    Nohohome

    08/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Amazon v. Sony, et.al., in War of the eBook Giants

    I can't wait to see this develop. Exclusivity has no place in the world any longer, as if it ever did. "Making money" off of information only reflects the lower rung on the ladder of life and, of course, capitalism. All information should be in the public domain with no paywalls, no keys required for access and no limits. I hope you are right, and that the open standard will finally prevail.

  •  
    2

    hotweir

    08/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Amazon v. Sony, et.al., in War of the eBook Giants

    Thank you for your comment. I am absolutely confident that an open standard will indeed prevail, and that we will all be better off for it!

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