What is this D book?

Andrej Mitrovic andrej.mitrovich at gmail.com
Mon Dec 20 06:58:53 PST 2010


On 12/20/10, Daniel Gibson <metalcaedes at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I'd be surprised if these books weren't 99% automatically generated
> (the last 1% is selecting a picture for the cover).
>

This is exactly what they do (or maybe it's just a one man operation).
Read this comment from wikipedia:

"As an example of the "care" given to the books, the book "History of
Georgia (country)" is about the European country Georgia but has a
cover image of Atlanta in the American state Georgia.[nan 7] The
Wikipedia article History of Georgia (country) does not make such a
comical blunder. Another example is a book about an American football
team with a soccer player on the cover.[nan 8]"

"The articles are often poorly printed with features like missing
characters from foreign languages, and numerous images of arrows where
Wikipedia had links. It appears much better to read the original
articles for free at the Wikipedia website than paying a lot of money
for what has been described as a scam or hoax. Advertising for the
books at Amazon and elsewhere does not reveal the free source of all
the content. It is only revealed inside the books, which may satisfy
the license requirements for republishing of Wikipedia articles"

"An Amazon.com book search on June 9, 2009 gives 1009 (August 6 gives
1859, October 1 gives 3978, September 20, 2010 gives 64,890) "books"
from Alphascript Publishing,[nan 3][nan 4] an imprint of VDM
Publishing Group. 1003 of the books are described as "by John
McBrewster, Frederic P. Miller, and Agnes F. Vandome". They are called
editors in the book listings. A recent "author" is named as "Mainyu
Eldon A." or similar. It seems the only content of the many books is
free Wikipedia articles, with no sign that these three people have
contributed to them. The books often have very long titles that are
full of keywords. Presumably, this is to make them more likely to be
found when searching on sites such as Amazon.com."

"As of 20 September 2010, 64,881 similar books are also available from
Betascript Publishing [nan 9][nan 10] "by Lambert M. Surhone, Miriam
T. Timpledon, Susan F. Maseken",[nan 11] including a book about The
Police Reunion Tour,[nan 12] featuring a picture of Police on its
cover.[nan 13]"

and

http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1666149:
"There's unfortunately already a whole boatload with extremely poor
quality control, totally crapping up Google Books and Amazon results,
especially for more niche topics. They're generally automatically
compiled by a script for tens of thousands of titles, and then printed
on demand, attempting to pass themselves off as original books on the
subject (no mention of "Wikipedia" anywhere). Two of the more
notorious publishers are Icon Group (some examples:
http://www.google.com/search?tbs=bks:1&tbo=1&q=%22we...) and
Alphascript (example: http://www.amazon.com/dp/6130070446). Sort of a
meatspace version of content farming."

So really there's work going on here, they just print out articles
with no editing whatsoever, and print a pretty picture on the front
page of the book. I wouldn't be surprised that those 3-4 editors that
are always listed do not even exist.


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