[Olpc-open] Olpc-open Digest, Vol 66, Issue 4

gnome gnome at greenglim.com
Fri Jan 20 19:16:08 EST 2012


As a college professor with a huge interest in e-textbooks and access to 
education, I was appalled at Apple's expansion on user-unfriendly EULAs 
into new territory.

Apple is claiming rights to *content* produced with its tools. As if 
Microsoft were to claim rights to books produced with Word.

This is insane.  I'm glad to hear moves are afoot to try to get the FTC 
involved.  Kudos to the OLPC community for doing it!

Quixote.

On 01/20/2012 09:00 AM, olpc-open-request at lists.laptop.org wrote:
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> Today's Topics:
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>     1. E-Textbooks good, now is a time to speak (Aaron Baca)
>     2. Re: E-Textbooks good, now is a time to speak (Samuel Klein)
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>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 20 Jan 2012 04:19:31 +0000
> From: Aaron Baca<abaca at PartnerASP.com>
> To: "olpc-open at lists.laptop.org"<olpc-open at lists.laptop.org>
> Cc: "jwales at wikia.com"<jwales at wikia.com>
> Subject: [Olpc-open] E-Textbooks good, now is a time to speak
> Message-ID:
> 	<C1CBE02925B7BE449497758FB307DC75DB49629B at NPIMX03.PartnerASP.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>
> As many here are aware, Apple has made recent annoucements regarding e-Book textbook initiatives.  I urge the OLPC community to act quickly with respect to this matter.  I feel that e-Book textbooks can be a great source of knowledge for the OLPC project to give to developing nations.  The issues though, I feel the OLPC community could uniquely address.
>
> 1) Apple's EULA for publishers requires books authored with their software remain distributed ONLY via Apple channels.  Hopefully officials at OLPC have some contacts with the US FTC (Federal Trade Commission) which can begin steps to remove such restrictions, such that publishers could donate professionally produced materials to the OLPC project, as well as private citizens making donations of licensed materials.
>
> It should be noted that Apple uses the ePub open format wrapped in their Fairplay DRM.  Essentially, publishing e-books created with the Apple software to other platforms only requires the removal of the wrapper, and if necessary, the addition of a new one.  Content would remain 100% usable with capable reading software.
>
> 2) OLPC is at an interesting juncture where the pricing of their devices as well as the rugged qualities thereof better meets the needs of school systems in the US as well as the rest of the world.  This presents an enormous opportunity for a device such as the XO-3 tablet to not just get more widespread recognition, but for partnerships with better funded US school districts to be formed.  Such partnerships would allow wider production of the XO-3 and other models as well as well as create large bulk orders of devices with matching hardware donations to developing nations.
>
> 3) OLPC as a charity organization enjoys positive press such that if the community and it's leaders spoke out about iBooks and other proprietary Apple practices which affect education, their voice would carry stronger political and social weight.  The benefits would not only be to OLPC, but would trickle down to other platforms and greater openness of information and knowledge.  Such a movement could also be leveraged equally against publishers who ransom knowledge at the highest margin they can accomplish.
>
> The idea of e-book textbooks is nothing new, but if there is to be a significant scale revolution to the use of e-books in the classroom, everyone should be included.
>
> I have also copied Jimmy Wales on this correspondence, as I hope some of this message coicides with his ideals at Wikia.
>
> I appreciate your time,
> Aaron Baca
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Fri, 20 Jan 2012 10:22:05 -0500
> From: Samuel Klein<sj at laptop.org>
> To: Aaron Baca<abaca at partnerasp.com>
> Cc: "olpc-open at lists.laptop.org"<olpc-open at lists.laptop.org>
> Subject: Re: [Olpc-open] E-Textbooks good, now is a time to speak
> Message-ID:
> 	<CAAtU9WKpcRPXSFazt2uiSKnQMru94Og9p=6YrDe1WH78rybRBQ at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> Aaron, thank you for your ideas.  We will certainly be pushing for the
> unfortunate EULA provisions to be dropped; it is not clear that they
> are enforcable.  And Apple has in the past made reasonable decisions
> about dropping unnecessary DRM.
>
>> The idea of e-book textbooks is nothing new, but if there is to be a significant scale revolution to the use of
>> e-books in the classroom, everyone should be included.
> Just so.
>
> SJ






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