Technology | publishing Amazon Squeezes Publishers Print with us or sell elsewhere, company tells on-demand publishers By Laila Weir Posted Mar 28, 2008 12:42 PM CDT Copied Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon.com, introduces the Kindle at a news conference in New York in this Nov. 19, 2007 file photo. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan) Publishers who print books on demand will have to use Amazon’s printing service if they want to sell their books on the leading online bookseller's site. Amazon's new policy means print-on-demand publishers will have little choice but to accept Amazon’s prices if they want to sell via the site. It also threatens to steal business from competing on-demand printers, reports the Wall Street Journal. Print-on-demand allows publishers to print books quickly in response to customer requests, rather than pre-printing large quantities. It’s rapidly expanding in popularity, and nearly all the major US consumer publishers use the technology for some books. Amazon appears intent on leveraging its online bookselling dominance to expand in other areas of book manufacturing and selling. Read These Next The suspect in the Charlie Kirk shooting is a 22-year-old from Utah. Utah's governor asks a tough question after Kirk shooting. ICE stop ends with driver dead, agent hurt. Trump says the Charlie Kirk suspect has likely been caught. Report an error