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Old 07-08-2010, 10:56 PM   #14
sabredog
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Posts: 2,630
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Perth, Australia
Device: Sony PRS-T3, Kindle Voyage, iPad Air2, Nexus7v2
Quote:
Originally Posted by =X= View Post
Based on your last sentence, you might want to read the licensee agreement you agreed to when you purchased your ebooks.

You'll find out that those eBooks are not yours but rather leased. And in those leasing terms they have the right to terminate server support and license support at any time.

So if the company stops carrying your book it is under no obligation to give you download access or re-authenticate your book with a new device or a new license scheme. Thus archiving a book of an outdated DRM is not going to help either.
=X=
Diesel was of the opinion that as I purchased these ebooks and the agency 5 had subsequently decided Australia was off the white list, I was entitled to a full refund.

To be honest, the best way to archive your purchases is to remove DRM. After all we all have a bookshelf full of paperbacks we have not read in a while!
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