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Joan Juliet Buck | 06/18/2008 5:24 pm

Oh, You Want This? Then It'll Cost You Extra

Joan Juliet Buck

The cable companies AT&T, Comcast and Time Warner Cable are cracking down on us for using the Internet. Time Warner has begun to monitor Internet use in a Texas town in an effort to identify what are called the “bandwidth hogs,” and, of course, charge them more, according to the New York Times.

The endless feeling of freedom that the net gives us to explore the world, watch TV shows, download music (legally), communicate by video conferencing, have a “second life” with avatars or read texts online could be curtailed, monitored, metered. We’re getting too much for free. We knew it was coming … and this at a time when the only things we may be able to afford are just those things the web has given us. Thanks a lot.

We knew it was coming ... and this at a time when the only things we may be able to afford are just those things the web has given us.

I can’t help but draw the parallel between this and how much it costs to go to college in the States, and how long it takes (decades!) graduates to pay off their students loans. But then some people have always put a premium on knowledge.

The other day I was in the French bookstore at Rockefeller Center in New York. The French bookstore was the first tenant of the complex in 1935, but the march of retail presses on, and the rent has gone up too high for plain old French books. Who the hell reads French books besides me and the French? (I have an excuse. It’s my first language.)

The bookstore is soon closing forever. On the first floor, they used to have cahiers — those French school notebooks with grids that have now become available, popular and wildly expensive at stationers around town. The French grid paper is fast giving way to plain American lines on those French notebooks. At the French bookstore they just don’t have them anymore. Instead, there are art and decoration books, severely reduced. You can get a 1960s decorating book for $20. If you want it. Art books for $20. Good-looking stuff. In the basement there are the reading books. Everything is reduced. I browsed.

Balzac? Seventeen paperback copies of Le Père Goriot. No thanks. But here was one copy of a novella called Seraphita, written while Balzac was under the influence of Swedenborg, the mystical philosopher. I’d read a library copy years ago. Here was my chance to own one. I picked it up from the shelf; a thin French paperback, a recent edition, pretty clean. Good. Then I saw the price: $49.95.

I took it to the checkout. “Forty-nine ninety-five?” I asked, waving the slim paperback.

“What is that?” asked the man behind the counter.

Seraphita,” I said.

“That’s a rare text. Yes, it’s forty-nine ninety-five.”

“I’m not paying $50 for a paperback,” I said.

“Is that the book you want?” asked the man behind the counter.

“Well, yes,” I said. “That’s why I’m asking you about the price.”

“Because Le Père Goriot is reduced.”

Here’s the message I’m getting: You can have what we don’t want, but if you want what you do want, you’ll have to pay an insane price.

 

23 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Frank Peterson
I utterly loathe and despise cable companies—they overcharge like the dickens. But I do like high-speed internet so I pay their exorbitant fees. When i rule the world I’m going after them first ;-) Joan first off you want the book? Go to ABEbooks.com—they sell from dealers all over the world. However, Jane Eyre 1st editions cost 17.5K so i won’t be buying my favorite book in a 1st any time soon. :-) ABEBooks is way cheaper than Amazon. Will $2.99 do it for you? http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?imagefield.x=0&imagefield….
By Frank Peterson on 06/18/2008 5:07 pm
Jane Wagner
I enjoy your posts so much, Joan J. This one, like your others, says a lot. We are living in the Ironic Age,aren’t we?Shouldn’t the cable companies be thought of as the Bandwidth Hog’s? Why us? gives new meaning to the phrase Net Profits, doesn’t it. I guess we need a new meaning since the old meaning is losing a lot of its relevance.Thanks for the reminder. We needed the red alert. Jane Wagner
By Jane Wagner on 06/18/2008 5:34 pm
Brooklyn Gal
Thank you Joan. And Jane you are right, they are becoming Bandwidth Hogs, not us. I don’t have cable and appreciated the opportunity to watch the Russet Memorial on the web. This will impact many people who may have to weigh the difference between using the information highway or buying food. It’s all about greed.
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/18/2008 5:51 pm
Frannie Em
Thank you Joan for the article, of course, well put. It makes me boil sometimes. I went into a bookstore and the paperback editions was $29.95 for a little slip of a book. I felt mad and then embarrassed that we have put up with this for so long. The last 10 years have been heavy consumer years so it seemed like prices accelerated with the “whatever the market can bear” attitude. I am tired of it and believe it is time for a change. There is a great tech guy on the radio on Saturday mornings, Leo LaPort, he broadcasts over the web, and has Leo LaPort TV on the web. He recommends DSL Extreme for internet. He claims it is as fast as cable and only $14.95 per mos. I think I will check it out.
By Frannie Em on 06/19/2008 1:02 am
Get Sporty
Jane, Ironic Age is right. To save money on International phone calls many friends/relatives have Skype. Problem is they’re speaking through their computers and 1/2 the call is “Excuse me?” “Can you speak directly into the computer please?” etc…..Sounds as if we’re back to using tin-cans and strings with our ‘work-arounds’ of corporate hogs. For those interested in Save the internet actions: http://www.savetheinternet.com/ http://civic.moveon.org/save_the_internet/
By Get Sporty on 06/18/2008 11:21 pm
Jane Wagner
Fluffy, guess we’ll have to start another movement…over the internet, but quick before we get charged.Thanks for the info. everyone should read Joan’s post and go to savetheinternet.com. Jane
By Jane Wagner on 06/18/2008 11:50 pm
Frannie Em
Lol “net profits”
By Frannie Em on 06/19/2008 1:03 am
mary lou s
joan, when i worked an election on january 15th, it was at the university of michigan. on my break, i walked to ulrich’s (a bookstore). on the store front it said: “proudly serving the university community for 35 years.” inside, the closest thing i found to casual reading was “the leaves of grass” by walter whitman. (do i have the name right? something looks off about that) i paid $ 6.95 for a well used paperback edition that originally sold for $ 1.50. the moral of the story? ulrich’s, proudly ripping off students for 35 years. the follow-up? i returned the book within three days and received an entire refund.
By mary lou s on 06/18/2008 8:13 pm
Frank Peterson
Mary Lou: he’s usually referred to as Walt Whitman. but no big deal; Walter’s just fine :-)
By Frank Peterson on 06/18/2008 9:26 pm
mary lou s
cable. phone. bandwidth. i buy a truncated version of cable for roughly $20/month. they don’t advertise it. both my land line phone (reliable) and my computer (external modem called dsl) rely upon the phone company. when the power is out, the phone company works. sorry, lily tomlin, but my phone company has my back. i cut the best deal i could, dollarwise, realizing that if i go with cable, they will wait a bit and raise the rates.
By mary lou s on 06/18/2008 8:20 pm
Linda Clark
My husband has made his living in the cellular phone industry for the past 22 years. It was not so long ago when the cell phone companies were “gig’n” us; they realized that if they wanted to grow, they’d have to make it affordable. Unfortunately, the cable/internet industry does not feel that we, the consumers, will put up a fight about their excessive rates. And to a point, they are correct. We continue to purchase their “package” deals. I would be happy to purchase my cable by the “channel”. My father grew up in an era when television was the new thing. It was marketed as “free”, that the advertisers will pay for the broadcasting; just as it is done in radio. To date, my dad does not have cable! For Father’s day we gave him two of those converter boxes that he’ll need come February 2009. I feel the same way as my dad does about television with regard to the cable/internet providers. The advertisers should pay for the broadcasting.
By Linda Clark on 06/18/2008 9:39 pm
Get Sporty
The airwaves belonged to the people until Congress liquidated the Fairness Doctrine. There are many media groups fighting for Net Neutrality, and some legislators like Senator Kennedy, too. I too love the independent bookstores, was so sad when “A Clean and Well Lighted Place for Books” closed. Was an institution and had the best author talks ever….outside of a PEN event. Another great independent announced its close in Palo Alto (also due to high rents) and the customers banned together and saved it. I googled for more info on the French bookstore a bit longer story: http://ny.therealdeal.com/articles/bookstores-move-to-the-basements Their website http://www.frencheuropean.com/ I notice on their hit counter they’ve had under 200,000 hits. There are a number of inexpensive things they can do immediately to up that including write a piece and send it to an inexpensive service that emails it to 300 ezines (gets picked up and republished). I’ll write a quick piece tomorrow and post on a few of the big ezine sites…and email the bookstore owner with a short ‘how to’…they could also hire an SEO marketer off Craigslist ‘gigs’ and a talented kid to do a youtube piece (I checked out NYC tech meetup.com groups…thousands of members…so they’d get a lot of quality responses if posted a Craigslist ‘gig’) There’s tons of online French clubs, (yahoo groups, meetups etc), the French Chamber of Commerce is so strong in the US, and also there’s a group in NYC that is funded by the French Minister of Culture exclusively to market French Books. The owners of the store has plenty direct online market potential. I did a google search for French online books and not many specific that compete: http://www.frenchbooksonline.com/ It’s great that people are writing about this and that you did too. Perhaps they’re reconciled to moving/closing down….but if not…they could definitely boost their online business.
By Get Sporty on 06/18/2008 11:03 pm
kermie b
My favorite bookstore/cafe is Malaprops in Asheville, North Carolina. Asheville is a great little town where they do not allow any chain stores. No Borders, no Starbucks … what a relief from NYC. It is no wonder that the folks there are so friendly and artsy and fantastic. They have their own minds dictating their actions, not a megacorporation. If I had the money to retire and move, right now, there is no doubt in my mind where I would go.
By kermie b on 06/19/2008 2:22 am
doll lady
RE: By ki b on 06/19/2008 2:22 am ki b….. sigh….Asheville is my most favorite city. I want to move there and maybe one of these days I will. I love the quaint feel of the city and Malaprops is tops for out of print books. Besides that the Biltmore Estate is probably the most perfect site to visit.
By doll lady on 06/19/2008 7:08 am
Jeannot Kensinger
Hi Doll lady, my daughter works at Biltmore, this is not just a castle (privately owned) but delicious garden, winery, farm , perfect place to bike , have weddings at the Inn or just relax. Check out Hendersonville next time you are here.
By Jeannot Kensinger on 06/19/2008 8:36 am