It's now Illegal to sell adult ebooks before 10 PM in Germany
the-digital-reader.comAre adult ebooks that one pays for reliably better than the the stuff on literotica.com?
It's hardly necessary to pay people to write, it's nearly impossible to stop them. Of course someone with real talent should be paid because then they will be able to concentrate on it without worrying about paying the rent.
But the best selling 'adult' book of recent time was Fifty Shades which is hardly a book of great literary quality so I suspect that the simplest way around the ban is to just read free stories.
It may be impossible to enforce this ban completely, but that doesn't mean that major sellers won't follow it and the others, those who are based in Germany, will get fined. Could be quite lucrative actually...
My personal thinking though is that this was a legislatory mistake. Not selling erotica on Television before 10pm was a good thing, back then. And it didn't matter until now.
I wonder if this will end up getting amended before it gets meaningfully enforced.
Otherwise, is there anything stopping erotic ebook sellers from just putting their servers in a different country?
That may be harder to achieve than you might think. Big sellers would have lots of employees inside Germany and smaller sellers may be reluctant to setup a multi-national business...
Assuming we're talking about German language content, it's likely small sellers would exist in Austria and Switzerland servicing that market. Furthermore, it wouldn't be terribly difficult for someone small to medium sized who doesn't specialize in German language content to include such content in a larger library.
All of this is absurd in an age where anyone can just type "hardcore porn" or any of myriad more specific requests in to google.
Yep. Amazon, Kobo, Apple, and Google (55% of the ebook market) all have operations in Germany. They cannot pull out, and nor can the local sellers that account for 40% of the ebook market.