flo: A blue lightbulb, seen close up. (Lightbulb)
After reading this post about Paypal coming down on certain types of erotica at Smashwords, All Romance Ebooks and Bookstrand at [community profile] ebooks over the weekend, I went hunting for more information. I found a giant roundup of links to internet chatter about the issue (somewhat helpful), and this morning, Jane at Dear Author posted an interesting roundup(*) of the facts associated with the situation, including a valuable little bit about the history of Paypal's exception regarding erotic ebooks. That answered a question I've been asking myself since I saw anything about this story-- namely, why on earth anyone publishing erotica online would keep doing business with Paypal.

So far, from what I've seen, the answer has been convenience, with a hefty side of "they'll probably turn a blind eye". Which seems to have been true for bigger ebook stores like Smashwords et al, at least until now.

It all makes me wonder what exactly is going on at Paypal )

Of course, the real bottom line here is that I'm going to have to learn as much about online payments as I can. In an environment where ebook compatibility is still a problem, and the biggest players are fighting to have their format and ebook store end up as the only effective place for authors to sell their ebooks, the ability to handle ebook sales with your own setup is looking more and more important.

(*) Jane's post was overwritten by mistake at about the time I posted this, so you might have seen a handful of small book reviews when you checked this link yesterday. I let her know about the error, and the original post is back up in its entirety.
flo: A blue lightbulb, seen close up. (Lightbulb)

Shit I have been wanting to respond to in some way for a goddamn week:

  • Dude? I know that this guy's article on iA Writer sounds good, but don't. Don't buy it. If you write long-form ANYTHING on an iPad, you probably already know that landscape is the only way to go if you're not attaching an external keyboard, and iA Writer's landscape SUCKS. The big, beautiful text means that you only get to see two or three paragraphs at a time (or, if you're like me, one or two very long paragraphs), and the extra row on top of their modified version of the built-in keyboard means that even more writing is obscured. Focus mode is kind of a joke-- in long-form writing, you generally need to refer back and forth to check spellings or whatever, and polishing a sentence is not something you need to grey out other text to do. Yeah, I know you bought it already. I am sorry in advance.

  • Apparently, the US Postal Service may be taking it's last dive. Really solid article at BusinessWeek, eye-opening and sad. Kind of explains why the junk mail really just keeps coming these days in the US. (via rmateu @ tumblr)

  • Unbound, a book-focused Kickstarter clone, is one of the most headscratching new publishing things I have seen, sporting only a 'book' focus and higher project fees as additions to the original formula. From the established author's pov (which is who they're targeting for supply for their initial push), the service doesn't really make much sense. If you have a new idea you want to write, you could very, very easily reach your current readers through Kickstarter or really any old website, set your own prices for each contribution level and promise more deliverable things than lunches in London (not so convenient if you live nowhere near there) and so forth. Best of all, you wouldn't have to pay a new, unproven publishing company 50% of the funding you get for your project, instead of the 10% that Amazon and Kickstarter would take.

  • Michael Mace's reaction to Windows 8, or basically the only article you need to read about Microsoft's recently announced, tablet-friendly incarnation of Windows.

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