Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken Maltby
For the Fictionwise purchases you can find the simple directions for unlocking
your ebooks by reading what it says on your bookshelf/the page that lists all
your purchases and provides the download links for them.
If you can't find an easy way to remove DRM infections, then you haven't
become proficient with search engines like Google. If that is proving difficult
for you, then you probably should restrict yourself to something like Kindle or
Nook. I should warn you though, the eReader DRM that you are having
trouble using is one of the easiest to use, and one that doesn't restrict you
to certain specific devices that are required to be registered to a site online.
Removing the DRM for the eReader DRM that Fictionwise uses,
(and for a time B&N) as well as a few others, requires that you enter
the same info as is required to unlock the file for reading on your device.
The following is an example of how a publisher may offer ebooks in different
formats and using different DRM scams:
http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/d...92&view=ebform
(Random House claims that the .pdb eReader format is their largest seller.)
Luck;
Ken
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I have no idea why you think this guy can't run Google searches. The JBLs process of loading your username and CC# to read DRM PDBs, is ARCHAIC, and may be 'simple' but how would you ever know how to do it without calling the company (which is what I did) considering there is absolutely no tech manual that covers this issue and nothing on their site.
To boot the JBL is tempermental and reads files HALF the time in some cases.
You should NOT have to be a hacker just to use an eReader.