Quote:
Originally Posted by JSWolf
What Kobo is doing is when they get any eBook in ePub 3, they convert it to kepub. And as more and more new ePub (from multiple publishers) are needlessly being created in ePub 3. Kobo will convert those to kepub.
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I know this. But that doesn't explain why a button that says DOWNLOAD EPUB doesn't actually let me DOWNLOAD AN EPUB. The fact that it was an EPUB3 was the least of my worries once I got my hands on the DRM-free file I paid for. A file that Tor Books graciously provides with no Digital Rights Management so I can enjoy it on any of my personal devices I feel like reading it on, I might add.