I see both sides of the argument.

Positive side:
We need quality books and content to bring more people on board with ACS.

Negative side:
By mentioning a book on official ACS page, we are inderectly recommending the 
publication, and if we begin being selective on what we recommend  (we dont 
want incompetent books), we get ourself into a wrong business. Once the book is 
published in print - its not easy to pull the books of the shelf, revise and 
reprint or discard them in trashbin, due to all costs involved. Telling 
publisher your book sucks, has errors, or plain wrong - won't help with sunked 
in costs, since they are not going to pull the book of the shelf post print - 
so bad press lives on.

Sebastian and Kelcey, im not against good content or books for ACS, im against 
hurting ACS image by poor publishers and inturn  setting authors and publishers 
against us because their book did not get mentioned on ACS page.
Unless you want to be indiscriminant and mention all books that have CloudStack 
in their title and mention "we are not responsible for this content neither do 
we endorse it" (which may cover us to some extent, but really does not help 
with bad/poorly written books).
Also imagine there are 20 books, who gets the spotlight  and who will be on the 
bottom? If im author or publisher I want my book always to get the spotlight, 
like google search result people tend to get fixated on the first 5.


Reason I proposed to stay neutral, is for us not to deal with all of the above.

How do you propose we deal with negative points above?



-------- Original message --------
From: Noah Slater <[email protected]>
Date:
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Packt Book - Publish on our website?


On 24 May 2013 23:06, Sebastien Goasguen <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> Not well enough apparently because I still don't get them.


Maybe you could list the opposing arguments and why you don't agree with
them?

(Me repeating them is likely to just take us round in circles.)

--
NS

Reply via email to