Image description: The image shows a Kindle e-reader displaying a page of text, likely from a book, with a portion of the text visible in a non-English language. Overlaid on the image are two text boxes with stylized red backgrounds and white lettering. The top text box says, “To combat chatGPT generated books on the kindle store, Amazon only allows users to publish 3 books ~per day.” The second text box sarcastically says, “You know, a totally normal human output,” accompanied by a rolling eyes emoji. There is also a graphic of a skeletal hand with a pink hue pointing towards the text boxes, adding emphasis to the message being conveyed about the volume of publication and questioning its normalcy.


(Originally published on mastodon.social: 2024-02-23)

    • Nawor3565@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      9 months ago

      Makes sense, but I’d say that it’d be reasonable to make publishing houses verify their identity somehow to get higher limits. If your Amazon account is just a standard personal account, you don’t need to publish that often.

      • wahming@monyet.cc
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        9 months ago

        Just playing devil’s advocate, but that would require human interaction and support, and probably wouldn’t be too hard to fake given there’s little barrier to becoming a ‘publishing house’. Also for little gain, since I don’t see much difference between once a day and 3 times a day

        • 4am@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          If you are a large publisher like Random or Penguin, you not only get human interaction but you probably have a dedicated team of reps for support and contact. Of course they get exceptions, it makes Amazon money. (And I’m not even mad, that’s not even scummy from a business perspective)

          Little unknowns dont get this treatment until they prove themselves.

    • 4am@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      Yeah this is exactly the reason. A fake publishing house using AI would be trying to publish under their one name anyway.

      If they made fake accounts as fake authors then they could be identified by their banking info anyway.

      It would be so costly and risky to set up enough bank accounts under assumed names in order to collect a profit from spraying junk across Amazon that it probably wouldn’t be attempted more than a handful of times.

      Major, reputable publishers will, of course, have “enterprise” accounts with exceptions to the rule applied.

      I thought people who read books were smart, where the hell was the two seconds of critical thinking it would have taken to realize this? Was this meme a desperate attempt to sway public opinion against Amazon’s supposedly unreasonable and oppressive policy?