Discovery of an educational text
co-authored by a New Zealander and made available for download on Kim Dotcom’s
file-sharing site Mega is just the ‘tip of the iceberg’ according to Publishers
Association of New Zealand president Sam Elworthy.
The text, Using MIS (Management Information Systems) (NZ)
by David M. Kroenke and Tony Hooper – a lecturer at Victoria
University in Wellington, was shared via a link posted on the Facebook page of
a tertiary institutions’ study group.
PANZ has issued a ‘take down’ notice
to Mega to remove the files from its site and contacted Facebook to have the
post removed.
“Educational texts are being
illegally shared at an alarming rate and it’s hurting New Zealand authors,
publishers and distributors to the point where earning a viable living is
becoming increasingly threatened,” Elworthy says.
“Technology makes sharing files
very easy but it’s the people who put in the hard work to make and supply the
texts in the first place who miss out.”
The text is published by educational
publisher Pearson and distributed in New Zealand by start-up business Edify.
Pearson quit the New Zealand market in August this year after claiming its
local business model was no longer sustainable.
“There are very few publishers now
investing in publishing for the New Zealand tertiary market due to its small
size. However it’s hugely important that the New Zealand context is provided to
support New Zealand students in their learning of a topic,” says Edify’s Adrian
Keane
“To see an author and publisher who
were prepared to make this investment in publishing for the New Zealand
environment treated in this way is infuriating. It will only serve as a
disincentive to any other author or publisher when they see the negative impact
that illegal downloading has on income.
“This particular text was even
available as an eText so it’s not like it was hard to access in a digital
format.
“Where we have a text that’s
prescribed for a course we used to be able to rely on 80% of the students
buying the book. Now that figure is more like 50% which puts the viability of
publishing these books under threat. It’s safe to say that illegal sharing is
really hurting both our business and the incomes of New Zealand authors who
spend months creating the works,” Keane says.
Elworthy says the link posted on
the student Facebook page went straight to the files on Mega meaning anyone
could download it.
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