Hello all! I'm new to 7Sage and gained access a few weeks before the LSAC disallowed the use of LSAT PDFs. I found the PDFs very helpful while they were still on the site, so I guess my question is: How are we supposed to do practice problems without the LSAT PDFs? I've been trying to watch the video explanations of the answers and pausing them so that I could do the questions myself, but I find that I'm unable to accurately time myself while I do this. Also, this method does not work for the Logic Games section, as the prompt is rarely provided in the videos.
Any suggestions would be great! Thanks!
Comments
http://7sage.com/discussion/#/discussion/2770/list-of-affordable-pts-paperback-hard-copy
If not, does anyone want to sell me used or unused PT 39-44?
I did not find these for sale on Amazon cheaper than $10 a test.
http://7sage.com/terms-of-service/
Here's a list of affordable PDFs:
http://7sage.com/discussion/#/discussion/2770/list-of-affordable-pts-paperback-hard-copy
If you printed your PTs or PSets from 7Sage, then you definitely are not allowed to lend, resell, whatever. It's in our TOS and the LSAC was very strict with us about this point when it allowed us to offer PDFs. We had to track every instance of access on our servers, we printed your account info onto the PDFs itself, etc. But, apparently and sadly, I think they felt that even those terms weren't severe enough and now they've effectively forbidden us from offering PDFs.
Alas, 39-44 are cheapest as Cambridge PDF's.
Do I need to bring up the pink eraser method again @VegMeg55
The "first sale doctrine" (wikipedia it if you're not familiar) prevents LSAC from having any say about what people do with hard copy LSATs once they are purchased. In an ideal world, though, they wouldn't allow the sale or share of used stuff at all, because they think they lose potential sales that way. Digital goods allow them to step closer to that ideal world. The dynamic you see here between hard copy tests and PDFs happens across all kinds of other media - books vs. ebooks, digital game downloads vs. discs, iTunes music vs CDs, and so on.
The key is the lack of an actual transfer. When you buy a copy of a book, possession of that copy is passed to you and taken away from someone else. With digital media, that doesn't happen. It's the same reason why you hear the endless parroting in some circles about how copyright infringers are not technically thieves, as theft involves depriving someone of their property.
The argument about lost sales has varying degrees of plausibility across situations, but I think it's fairly safe to say that LSAT demand is fairly inelastic. PrepTests are absolutely necessary for most people to succeed, so I think it's pretty reasonable to say that a significant proportion of used sales by a third party correspond directly to a lost sale of a new copy for the LSAC. That being said, with PDFs already out in the wild, the trivial nature of making a PDF out of a paper copy (which is still going to be distributed), and the willingness of the vast majority of people to give rights holders the finger if it means they can get cheap/free stuff, I have no idea how LSAC could think this will allow them to recapture revenue. Dumb business decision.
It would be interesting to watch the collective heads of the LSAC explode if a public library would buy 10 copies of the Cambridge complete PT set in PDF, and start to loan them...