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Originally Posted by DiapDealer
Same as it ever was.
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Not really. Before KFX was introduced, Amazon didn't bother with strengthening their DRM; back then they cared more about acquiring new customers than about keeping the existing customers caged in. It was the same old DRM for several years. And even post-KFX there was always D&T to fall back to, if KFX couldn't be decrypted. Now there's no more D&T, which means that until the new DRM is cracked (if it's cracked at all), there would be very few methods to still deDRM Kindle books (ancient Kindles and the Android method, and the latter could easily be disabled by Amazon). We cannot be sure that there will always be someone able and willing to crack a new Amazon DRM, either.