Tags: amazon

Cyranose

Amazon cancels the Stargate TV series before it fully starts production

Well, the odds weren't good that it would see the light of day. I had just heard they were in development earlier this year. I was really looking forward to this, we enjoyed the original and the SG-1 series.

I still cringe whenever I'm in a theater and I see the MGM logo and Amazon with it. It just makes me sad. Perhaps it's better than MGM dying entirely, but not by much.

https://screenrant.com/stargate-am…
Cyranose

Amazon being sued over "buying" a movie via streaming

A similar case has been in litigation since 2000. Specifically, everything hinges on the sub-headline: "A suit challenges Prime Video telling people they can "buy" a movie when they're purchasing a license to watch it for a period of time." Licensing. They're using wiggle-words to get you to pay money so you think you're purchasing an intangible when, if Amazon loses the license to supply it, it gets yanked from your library.

In the early days of the Kindle, a high school AP English student was writing a paper on 1984 that he had "purchased", he was going to use as a college submission essay. Amazon lost the license for that particular edition of 1984 and yanked it from all Kindles using their ubiquitous Whispernet. Not only did the book go away, but so did his paper. Impossible to recover. Up until that point, no one really understood in a real fashion that (A) Amazon would yank books like that, and (2) if you had notes, they were irretrievably gone if a book went away. He sued, I have no idea what became of it. I believe Amazon gave him another copy of 1984. YAY JUSTICE!

The article goes on to say "...Consider the $4.99 director’s cut of Alien on Amazon Prime Video. Cheap, right? But if the tech giant loses the rights to that version, the movie can be replaced with a different cut, like the one for theaters. And if Amazon loses the rights to the film altogether, it’ll completely disappear from the viewer’s library.

So should Amazon be able to say a consumer is “buying” that movie? Some people don’t think so, and they’ve turned to court."


The main crux is bait and switch, Amazon contends that the consumer is aware that the term "buy" is understood by the purchaser to be limited to Amazon continuing to own the license.

This is why most of the ebooks that I buy either come with no DRM or are in a format that I can crack, and I don't "buy" online videos, just DVDs/Blu-rays. On occasion I'll rent a streaming video.

And this is also a problem for gamers who buy games from streaming game services like Sony or Epic, where they shut down a particular game or platform.

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/…

https://yro.slashdot.org/story/25/…
Cyranose

Amazon closing 68 physical stores across the US and UK

Gee. Who is surprised at this. The closure includes some of their book stores.

These physical locations got hit hard by the pandemic, but I question how devoted Amazon is to this. They are still playing with their cashierless stores and with Whole Foods, but this can't be a very big part of their bottom line.

The closures will be staggered depending on the location and dates will be announced per store.

I think I've only seen one store, I believe it was a pop-up at Scottsdale Fashion Square, ages ago. I breezed through it and was not impressed.

https://techcrunch.com/2022/03/02/…

https://slashdot.org/story/22/03/0…
Cyranose

I'm glad I don't do IT for a shipping company

the "logic" would drive me (more) insane bigly.

I ordered some stuff from Amazon. Here's the latest shipping update.

Shipped with UPS
Tracking ID 1Z2FW8240xxxxxx

Saturday, March 23 1:53 PM
Package has left the carrier facility
Louisville, KY US

Friday, March 22 1:20 PM
Package arrived at a carrier facility

Louisville, KY US 6:01 AM
Package has left the carrier facility

Oakland, CA US 4:10 AM
Package arrived at a carrier facility

Oakland, CA US 2:43 AM
Package has left the carrier facility

Lathrop, CA US
Thursday, March 21 10:58 PM
Package arrived at a carrier facility

Lathrop, CA US
Package has shipped


Now, the package shipped from California. It is being delivered to New Mexico. To the best of my knowledge, unless there has been a radical change in the physical universe, there is one state between California and New Mexico and Kentucky is a few states further east. The package is slated to be delivered Monday, it'll be interesting to see if it goes to El Paso and up or Albuquerque and down to Las Cruces and over.

It's like my meds. They ship from El Paso via UPS. El Paso is 2 hours south of me. For next day delivery, they fly to Albuquerque, about 4 hours north of me, are trucked down to Las Cruces, 2.5 hours S of ABQ, then trucked to Alamogordo, 1 hour East of 'Cruces, then up the mountain to me, another half an hour. One year they got misrouted somehow and took a tour of California for a few days, fortunately it was after the meds had switched to the much more tolerant of temperature version. I should look up the email that described the route that they took, it was quite a meandering path.

This entry was originally posted at https://thewayne.dreamwidth.org/11…. Please comment there using OpenID.
Cyranose

RadioShack dying, Amazon buying?!

RadioShack is not just on Death's door, they're opening it and stepping in briskly. The New York Stock Exchange has delisted them, their stock was trading at 24 CENTS per share the other day, and they can't some up with $50,000,000 to stave off the inevitable.

This makes me very sad. Radio Shack was a major part of my childhood. I bought a lot of stuff from them: even if most of their consumer electronics were crap, they were one of the few places where you could easily buy individual electronic components. In fact, I went to our local store last night to buy a new audio cable for my car (I have to replace it once or twice a year, it shorts out and makes it had to listen to podcasts).

In fact, I bought my first computer from RadioShack in the early '80s: a TRS-80 Model 100. It was one of the first portable computers ever made, it was powered by 4xAA batteries that would power it for ages, had an 8 line by 40 character display, and 24k of non-volatile memory. You could hook up two different kinds of disk drives (both 3.5" and 5.25"), an external monitor, optical bar code reader, cassette tape recorder if you didn't have the disk drive, etc. Built-in BASIC programming language, built-in text editor, etc. Amazingly capable computer: not only do I still have it, but it still works. I power it on occasionally for amusement. It also had a fantastic keyboard.

Even though this computer is 30+ years old, it's very popular among marine researchers: you can put it in a 2 lb Ziploc and take it out on a boat.

Here's a lamentation from Wired:
http://www.wired.com/2015/02/dear-…

And here's the Wired article saying that Amazon might buy them:
http://www.wired.com/2015/02/amazo…

This would be a good move for Amazon. They'd get A LOT of stores for very cheap, they're spread around major cities and have presences in many smaller ones, like here. It lets them show off their own line of Kindle electronics and would provide space for drop-shipping items. I would certainly use a drop-ship and drive two miles from work to the nearest RS/Amazon store if it saved money and got my stuff to me quicker.

But apparently the Amazon/RS talks are for a limited number of stores, not the whole chain. Sprint is also in talks to acquire the stores, so I expect they'll end up busting up the chain and selling it off piece by piece.
Cyranose

Amazon, not yet tired of going after Hachette, is now going after Warner Video

It may already have been resolved: the article said that you couldn't pre-order the Lego movie, yet I just looked at Amazon and it looks like you can.

One comment talked about the Walmart Effect, where their demand for lower prices from suppliers resulted in factories and jobs moving to China, shrinking the American economy. The low prices we pay at Walmart doesn't include a subsidy that we pay through taxes to support food stamp programs and other government assistance programs because Walmart also forces low wages on its workers.

There's a reason why America is faced with a 'jobless recovery': driving costs so low has destroyed jobs that won't return.

http://money.cnn.com/2014/06/11/me…
Cyranose

Amazon rudely flexing its muscles vs publishers

I first came across this a couple of days ago while browsing my Twitter feed, a rare event. Fred Hicks of Evil Hat Games was writing a lot about it. Nasty stuff, makes me glad that we buy from Barnes & Noble and another chain when we can.

"Amazon, under fire in much of the literary community for energetically discouraging customers from buying books from the publisher Hachette, has abruptly escalated the battle. The retailer began refusing orders late Thursday for coming Hachette books, including J.K. Rowling's new novel. The paperback edition of Brad Stone's The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon — a book Amazon disliked so much it denounced it — is suddenly listed as 'unavailable.' In some cases, even the pages promoting the books have disappeared. Anne Rivers Siddons's new novel, The Girls of August, coming in July, no longer has a page for the physical book or even the Kindle edition. Only the audio edition is still being sold (for more than $60). Otherwise it is as if it did not exist. Amazon is also flexing its muscles in Germany, delaying deliveries of books issued by Bonnier, a major publisher."

I'll be honest: I'm of very mixed feeling re: Amazon. My main objection has been the genocide of mom & pop book stores, but they have many business practices that I'm not exactly sanguine about. The genocide wasn't Amazon's fault, it began when B. Dalton and Waldenbooks started growing and became Barnes & Noble and Borders. Then along comes Bezos and Amazon destroys Borders and is close to doing in B&N. Some small chains have found places where they survive, we have one such here called Hastings. And while we do drop a fair amount of coin there, they are an endless source of frustration for my wife and I. A couple of years ago Bujold had a new book coming out on my wife's birthday, the release date was confirmed through Bujold's web site, Amazon, and B&N. Hastings told us to our face that they wouldn't be getting it for two months. So it was ordered from Amazon. And don't get me started on gripes about Kindles.

We buy a lot of non-entertainment from Amazon, right now I'm wearing a pair of sweat pants that I couldn't find locally. Sweat pants. What a ridiculously trivial item, yet I shopped in three different cities for them and couldn't find what I needed. I love the used book marketplace that Amazon provides, I recently got a training manual for a slightly older piece of software from some used bookstore that otherwise would have been hard to track down, and it was a drop kick finding it on Amazon. I've ordered lots of used books on Amazon, but only after I scour my regular supply of used bookstores and come up empty.

I guess it boils down to this: I could live without Amazon, but I don't want to. But if they continue their rectal haberdashery ways, I may put it to the test.

http://news.slashdot.org/story/14/…
Cyranose

French law helps 300 book stores in Paris to stay in business

They don't allow discounters like Amazon to cut the price of books more than 5%, plus the Paris government buys buildings in high-rent districts to give book stores affordable rents. France is in the process of passing a law that prohibits the 5% discount and adding free shipping on top of it.

I wonder if Jeff Bezos is crying to his Congressional friends that this is anti-capitalism. It is, it's blatant market protection to help small businesses be competitive to ensure diversity and to help employment, otherwise Amazon would swoop in and most of those small bookstores would shutter very quickly.

I always get depressed when I go in to a mall and there are no bookstores. There are three bookstores in a 75 mile radius of my house: a used one infested with cats, a tiny one with a very limited selection, and a Hastings which rarely has what we're looking for. I appreciate Amazon in that it's our only option without driving 75+ miles, I just hate that they drove/are driving out of business the big box stores that drove so many of the small bookstores out of business.

The article also notes that France has a much lower adoption rate for ebooks, which I also appreciate. They have their place, but they are no substitute to a printed copy (a lot of the time). I have a friend who practically lives off ebooks as she has fibromyalgia and weak hands and cannot hold large hardbacks for extended periods of time.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels…
Cyranose

Amazon announces $3 ebooks: if you bought the dead tree edition from them

About bloody time. I hope Barnes & Noble follows suite. I prefer, for a variety of reasons, B&N ebooks and their Nook over Amazon's format and the Kindles. My problem is that I have an old Nook tablet, theoretically I can root it and it will run a version of Android, but I don't know if it'll be a late enough version to access Google's Play store and the Kindle app. B&N is going to be announcing two new Nooks soon, so I may need to buy a new tablet in the not distant future.

http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/383932…
Cyranose

Amazon gets an exclusive digital deal with DC Comics, Barnes & Noble yanks DC from their shelves

"In response to DC Entertainment's agreement to exclusively offer digital versions of certain titles in Amazon Kindle format, Nook maker Barnes & Noble has begun pulling DC Entertainment's graphic novels off its shelves. Confirming the decision, B&N said in a statement, 'To sell and promote the physical book in our store showrooms, and not have the eBook available for sale would undermine our promise to Barnes & Noble customers to make available any book, anywhere, anytime.' Nice to see the pair is still able to keep their feud fresh on the 11th anniversary of the 1-Click patent infringement lawsuit."

I can understand B&N's viewpoint, it'll be interesting to see how this plays out long-term.

http://news.slashdot.org/story/11/…


In other news, B&N bought what was left of Borders and has been sending out emails to Borders book club members telling them that unless they opt-out, their information will be integrated into the B&N datamart. On one hand I don't have a problem with this as B&N and Borders were my main brick & mortar book sources. On the other hand, it sets a bad precedent for acquisitions and data privacy.