ReDigi Plans to Sell Used E-books

For serial entrepreneur John Ossenmacher, cofounder, president, and CEO of ReDigi, which bills itself as “the world’s first pre-owned digital marketplace,” the copyright infringement case filed by Capitol Records in U.S. District Court in Manhattan at the start of the year to shut it down is only a “hiccup in the road.” ReDigi, which launched its Web site (redigi.com) with used digital music late last year, is poised to start reselling ebooks once the case is resolved. Ossenmacher and partner Larry Rudolph, who took a leave of absence from his work at MIT, are eager to do so, since ebooks will have a much higher ticket price than 69¢ songs. Their goal is to unlock the billions of dollars that consumers have invested in digital goods by reselling them, using the partners’ patented cloud-based technology, which enables them to weed out pirated goods. Continue reading at 'Publishers Weekly'

[ Publishers Weekly | 2012-07-27 00:00:00 UTC ]

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Fifth Circuit Hears Appeal of Texas Book Rating Law

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Booksellers, Publishers Urge Appeals Court to Uphold Block on Texas Book Rating Law

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Expedited Appeal in Texas Book Rating Case Delayed by Three Weeks

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Google gets sued by newspaper publisher Gannett

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PW 2022 Notable: Florence Pan

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US judge blocks $2.2bn Penguin Random House merger

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Amazon.com and 'Big Five' publishers accused of ebook price-fixing

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Firm Behind Apple E-books Case Now Suing Amazon for Price Fixing

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Publishers Applaud Appeals Court Opinion in ‘Capitol Records v. ReDigi’ Copyright Case

The Second Circuit Court of Appeals rules that resale of digital content as conceived by the startup ReDigi is a copyright infringement. The post Publishers Applaud Appeals Court Opinion in ‘Capitol Records v. ReDigi’ Copyright Case appeared first on Publishing Perspectives. Continue reading at Publishing Perspectives

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Darren Sharper again seeks sentence reduction

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Will Ruling in ReDigi Case Open the Door to a Used E-book Market?

That’s the heart of the question now before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, after a lively hearing on Tuesday in the case of Capitol Records vs. ReDigi. Continue reading at Publishers Weekly

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Facebook must pay $500 million in damages in Oculus intellectual property case

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Facebook's Zuckerberg ordered to testify over Oculus purchase

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