Bob Magness
Member
Alright, I have been listening to a lot of audiobooks this past year. I really enjoy them when my eyes are busy with something else. I have been buying them from itunes or Audible.com. I realize many free ones from the public domain are available at LibriVox but I find the quality touch and go, so I usually end up paying for a professionally recorded one.
So that got me to thinking. There are tons of public domain books out there, many of which haven't been recorded into audio format yet. What is to stop someone from setting up a sound room, purchasing some decent recording equipment, and producing audiobooks from this non-copyrighted material and selling them for a modest profit? Is it unethical to profit off of public domain material? The way I see it you are charging for the time and effort investment you put into the recording process.
I was also thinking about a niche for faster readers/listeners. In my opinion most audiobooks are recorded way too slow. I almost always listen to mine on double speed on my iphone. I realize they record them slow because most listeners probably want it that way. But not ALL listeners. Surely there are other listeners out there, like me, who are more comfortable with a faster pace (not the extreme of an auctioneer mind you). If you operated within that niche you could even produce audiobooks that have been done before because you would be offering something a bit different.
Does this sound like a feasible side business? I just know that I am often looking for audiobooks of a particular title and can't find them. When I do find them they are just too slow, forcing me to listen to them at double speed. It seems like a demand waiting to be filled. Or perhaps I am over projecting and I am the only person demanding such a thing.
What do you all think?
So that got me to thinking. There are tons of public domain books out there, many of which haven't been recorded into audio format yet. What is to stop someone from setting up a sound room, purchasing some decent recording equipment, and producing audiobooks from this non-copyrighted material and selling them for a modest profit? Is it unethical to profit off of public domain material? The way I see it you are charging for the time and effort investment you put into the recording process.
I was also thinking about a niche for faster readers/listeners. In my opinion most audiobooks are recorded way too slow. I almost always listen to mine on double speed on my iphone. I realize they record them slow because most listeners probably want it that way. But not ALL listeners. Surely there are other listeners out there, like me, who are more comfortable with a faster pace (not the extreme of an auctioneer mind you). If you operated within that niche you could even produce audiobooks that have been done before because you would be offering something a bit different.
Does this sound like a feasible side business? I just know that I am often looking for audiobooks of a particular title and can't find them. When I do find them they are just too slow, forcing me to listen to them at double speed. It seems like a demand waiting to be filled. Or perhaps I am over projecting and I am the only person demanding such a thing.
What do you all think?