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Originally Posted by davidfor
Obok was developed by a different person than the other DRM removal tools, so it is quite reasonable for it not to be in the same place.
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ALL of the DRM removal tools were developed by very many different people. No one person is responsible for The Tools coming in to being. I don't want to argue with you. I'm not new to this game. And I certainly don't need any lectures on the subject. The fact that we are even discussing a DRM removal tool in regards to "retrieving" a drm-free epub is ridiculous. DRM-free is supposed to be
easy. EPUB retailers are purposely crapping on the wishes of people who are at least
attempting to make my ebook experience easier by selling DRM-free epubs.
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So it is wrong for Kobo to develop their application to follow Microsoft's standards? Yes, you can make an argument that they should be in the documents directory, but where they are is a valid place for data that is only to be used by the one application. The DRM protected books fit into that category and it would make no sense to separate them.
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But we're not talking about DRM protected books, are we? We're talking about files that people are supposed to have easy access to. And I'm not aware of any other Desktop Reading software that stores its books files in directories that are hidden by default--DRMed or otherwise. Are you?