That doesn't seem to make sense though. If a publisher has exclusive rights in say the UK then why can a UK store sell and ship a paper book overseas? How are a paper book and e-book any different when it comes to a contract on selling and where it is sold.
I used to have a few letters from publishers/distributors in the 70s and 80s, the early days of my avid book collecting, that told me,
"Unfortunately, we do not have the rights to import that book into Australia and your special order has been canceled." Several times, it would be about one title in a series; the remaindered titles had somehow made their way to bargain tables the world over, but certain titles were still unable to cross borders at full price.
This kind of thing happened to me on numerous occasions. As a young, keen book collector, such things made no sense, especially when I found a US penpal who could go to her local bookshop, buy the item and send it to me as "a gift", and I could send her instant pavlova sachets in return. (Ironically, white powder, which would probably cause a panic today.) The arrival of Amazon meant I didn't have to go through such agony, or jump through such tricky hoops. Those publishing restrictions often still apply to importing in bulk, but one copy to a lone individual slips through like a piece of ordinary mail.
Similarly, Amazon warns me very sternly, whenever I buy Region 1-coded DVDs, that they "may not function" on DVD players used in other countries. Australia has had multi-region players for decades now. You could buy a factory-set Region 4 player and enter a secret code to have it go back to multi-region format, or you could
ask the store to reset it for you (some used to charge a fee). Then someone challenged the process in court and they won - much to the horror of Australian distributors, who still had binding contracts and international agreements for
exclusive Region 4 sales, and yet individual members of the public could suddenly legally import Region 1 and Region 2 DVDs.
Again, when it was just a few early adopters doing it, the ripple effect was still minimal, but now more and more people don't think twice about Internet shopping. To just "allow" everyone to do it may have far-reaching effects on countries' economies. Wasn't Amazon's stated mission, when it started up, to ultimately be the one-stop bookshop for the whole world?
I sent a large parcel to the US at Christmas time and it was hit with a new charge: essentially it's to cover what costs might be incurred if it has to be checked at US Customs. Not that it will be checked, just in case it does get checked. Then, if there is duty to be paid, the recipient will get slugged a fee, too.
As I said earlier, the Australian retailers are suddenly baulking at individual customers avoiding Australian GST by ordering books, CDs, DVDs, furniture, white goods, digital music, eBooks, etc., online. Since there's no effective way to prevent such online ordering, I can see the governments reaction to this will ultimately be a charge on every imported piece of mail. Some kind of "user pays" system for
all imports will probably have to happen, especially since regular mail has dwindled with the popularity of email, online banking, online billing for utilities, online bank statements and so on. But again, digital downloads have the potential to escape such a system, because they don't physically cross international borders.
To just continue to let it happen is just as shortsighted as the attempts to restrict it.
I'm fairly sure Amazon wouldn't be selling books to international customers if they weren't allowed to.
Actually, they can and do, but whose in charge of checking? The publishers would have to
notice that their book is listed for sale to countries who can't have that edition. Is UK Customs supposed to have a list of every book legally allowed to be imported? Just not viable.
There are products on Amazon (PC and DS games, for example) that they will simply refuse to sell to me over in the UK.
Exactly, and many licensed tie-in toys as well, because it's relatively easy to stop all of one type - but general books are more difficult to restrict, even though their may well be book contracts out there being trampled upon. Licensed tie-in contracts are tighter and easier to police.