Quote:
Originally Posted by Jane12
Once booksellers and libraries start adopting this "hardened Adobe DRM," my friend won't be able to read any new books. And this is an ereader that's less than a year old and supposedly had the advantage of not being locked in to a single bookseller. Instead, she may soon be locked out of all booksellers and libraries. Does Adobe realize this is what's happening on the consumer end? Perhaps this new DRM will make the publishers happy, but it's a nightmare for the end-user -- i.e., the people who are just trying to read books.
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For now , I can just say don't worry, besides if you have issues I can help resolve them.
Also just for discussion sakes, kobo uses acs 4.0 which is permanently old drm.
And lets say migrating server infrastructure is not an easy job and barnes and noble uses passhash, which is not affected by the new drm.