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Old 08-29-2025, 04:54 PM   #71
DNSB
Bibliophagist
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DiapDealer View Post
If you stockpile unread ebooks, this makes perfect sense too. I just don't do that. I don't purchase ebooks (or audiobooks) until I'm ready to read them. I let someone else curate my electronic TBR until I make the decision to read one. I'm JIT all the way. So DRM is no longer a mitigating factor in my reading/buying habits. I can't be bitten by DRM servers being shutdown, because I haven't purchased the book yet. By the time I do, I'm reading that DRMed copy and tossing it when I'm done.
Currently, my TBR pile is sitting at 2 books. I tend to burn through books rather enthusiastically.

Quote:
Originally Posted by DiapDealer View Post
I'm not saying everyone needs to think about this the way I do. I'm just saying that DRM is only a factor if you choose to let it be. I am fully post-property when it comes to consuming ebooks and audiobooks. I don't need to own the bits and bytes after I've wrung all the good out of them by reading them (or "listening" to them for all of the pedants out there getting ready to leap ). I've gotten every bit of value out of them that I'm ever going to get. Why keep the carcasses?

And for all the newcomers out there, this is coming from a guy who used to religiously remove DRM (and actually contributed quite a bit of code to the software you all use to "own" your ebooks). So I'm not being blind (and I'm not underinformed). I've just moved on. More and more people are.
As mentioned before, as a person who will re-read a book decades later, my view differs. That does not make either point of view wrong or less valid, just different. My view may change but at this point in my life, I suspect it's ossified.

Last edited by DNSB; 08-29-2025 at 04:59 PM.
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