Advertisements in E-books?



AD building
Originally uploaded by Straws pulled at random

OK, thanks to Steve Gibson tweeting an article in ReadWriteWeb, my weekend is ruined. A Wall Street Journal editorial claims that according to a business professor and a former book editor (Ron Adner and William Vincent), ads in E-books are the next big thing.

Sacrilege, right? Ads in books were never done, according to the editorial, because “there is no guarantee of when or whether the book will sell”. But with E-books we can have more timely and more reader-focused ads. Fantastic! Right?

I don’t think so, Skippy.

If I buy a book, I pay anywhere from $10 to over $100 (depending on quality of book, both physically and content-wise). Putting ads in a book that I’m already paying for is comparable to putting an ad in the middle of the movie that I just bought on DVD. Or an ad in the middle of that new CD. They’re annoying, because they distract from the story, music, or other activity I’m engaging in.

One argument used why ads in E-books may succeed is that tech giants like Google are already adding ads to content. But you cannot compare free content (search results) with paid content (books). What works on one platform will not work on another. We live in a world where people pay $0.99 or $1.99 to download an application to their smartphone, just to have no ads. So now we’re going to create a model where I pay for the content and are exposed to ads?

The article in ReadWriteWeb also states that E-books are not a possession, since you cannot share them with friends, or that the seller can make the book disappear from your library. Give me a break.

First of all, the only time E-books cannot be shared with friends is if the book has DRM and has a flag set that specifically prevents that from happening. Apple’s iTunes has DRMed songs that can be copied, but have your signature in them – so mass distribution is not a good idea. On top of that,  there are plenty of DRM-free publishers out there. They allow you to share a book – without any technical barriers. Second of all, the seller that did make a book disappear (Amazon and the books “1984″ and “Animal Farm”) received a storm of critique, no matter how legally justified and compelling the removal was. They vowed never to delete a purchased book again.

Ads in E-books? I think it’s an extremely bad idea. It’s an old  media idea, where you try to get as much money out of a product, instead of trying to make a product that is actually appealing to the customer. Go read “What Would Google Do?” by Jeff Jarvis for some tips on that idea. And no, I didn’t get any money for that “ad”.

NotScripts – The NoScript option for Chrome

Tuesday the 18th of August a Google Chrome plugin called NotScripts was released that makes controlling which JavaScripts, IFrames and plugins run in your browser a whole lot easier. NotScripts is developed by Eric Wong on the Optimal Cycling website.

Before this plugin, you were forced to use the Chrome Option to disable JavaScript, and selectively allow sites to run JavaScripts. However, when you enabled it for a site, everything that that site sent to you was enabled – including potentially harmful third party sites using JavaScript. It is possible to dive into the settings and enable some sites while disabling any malicious websites, but it was far from user friendly. I desperately missed the NoScript from Firefox. So desperately, that in some cases I went back to Firefox to make sure I wouldn’t be exposed to any JavaScripts I didn’t like.

After installing NotScripts, a little pyramid icon appears in your address bar, to the left of the bookmark button. Clicking it shows a list of all the sites that try to run scripts on the page you’re viewing. You can enable them one by one, or temporarily allow scripting globally. When at least one site is enabled, the pyramid now gets a green square over it.

The installation requires you to modify a file deep in the bowls of your computer. The file contains a password used to encrypt the settings from NotScripts, as they are stored in an area accessible by any site you’re visiting. So to prevent tampering with the file, it’s encrypted. I think in later versions this may be controlled with a settings option, to make it user friendlier. Then again, this is a one-time option, so it’s not too invasive.

Part of NotScripts option page, with password enabled

NotScripts is open source and is released under the GNU General Public License v3. Development is continuing (version 0.9.1 was released the 18th, one day after 0.9.0!), and the author is asking for donations to continue development.

Google rumored to launch Chrome OS tablet on November 26th

Download Squad reported Wednesday that Google is rumored to be building a Chrome OS tablet with HTC. It’s supposed to launch on November 26th, Black Friday.

Concept art from Google of Chrome OS tablet

Although that sounds like good news, I’m kinda disappointed that it’s not going to be an Android tablet. After the recent Android tablets from third parties (most notably/notoriously the “KMart tablet”), I hoped this rumor would be Google’s tablet version of the Nexus One. Google is now trying to cover the same market (tablets) with two different platforms (Android and Chrome OS). I think that could be a serious mistake: developers already have to choose between iPhone/iPad and Android, and now you’re adding a third platform in the mix. And that new platform is from the same company as one of the previous choices.

That doesn’t mean I’m not excited about the news. I hope it’s true, and I guess I’ll have to start saving up my money for Black Friday (or Cyber Monday).

Virus alert – a more user friendly message…

Ah, if only we had a more user friendly message to alert us of a virus… instead of “A virus has been detected in gloob.dll”…

Something like this perhaps…: