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#91 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 204127028
Join Date: Jan 2010
Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD
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Fair enough (and no mockery from me). That's why I asked what your post meant. I suspected from your wording that you didn't know the "lay of the land" RE Kindle and Amazon.
Last edited by DiapDealer; 11-01-2018 at 10:39 AM. |
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#92 | |
Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Oct 2018
Device: None
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Quote:
You buy your new super duper Kindle for its amazing introductory price. On startup it insists on you loading information about yourself. All your old books load no problems. You open a side loaded book and it reads good. bout 2/3 way through it recognises the book as one it has a protection deal with the publisher. At that point it checks for a licence number in the books header and compares with the data you loaded. If they don't match it asks for proof of purchase. Oh. And your kindle will insist on calling home on the net every time it can and will do something horrid if there are too many kindle devices with the same personal data or the headers are faked. Nothing really amazing bout this. It's the same tricks used to protect software. The only difference is software can be protected on any device as long as it insists on calling home to function. An ebook can only be protected on a device with protection built in. |
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#93 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 204127028
Join Date: Jan 2010
Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD
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But in this future fantasy, someone needs to convince Amazon that turning into the internet police will be good for their business.
And for what it's worth: all registered Kindles have "phoned home" all along with no disastrous results (disregarding the one-off 1984 snafu). It's simply not in Amazon's/Kindle's best interest to hassle users about what goes on their devices. It's in their best interest to sell them books (DRMed if the publishers so request) they can read on a plethora of devices. |
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#94 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 91577715
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Charlottesville, VA
Device: Kindles
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Quote:
These days almost all Kindle books sold by Amazon are delivered to apps and devices in KFX format. KFX always has DRM encryption applied, even when the same book delivered in another format would not have DRM. Amazon is being aggressive with KFX DRM, currently rolling out a new DRM scheme since the original one was cracked earlier this year. Owners of e-ink Kindle devices currently have an easy way to bypass KFX by downloading directly from Amazon, but there is no guarantee that will continue to be the case for newer Kindles. In other cases KFX is avoidable using hacks, but those are not sanctioned by Amazon and may also be removed in the future. |
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#95 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 204127028
Join Date: Jan 2010
Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD
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Quote:
They've had the access and the technology to detect Amazon content that has had their DRM removed from it since the very beginning (except for those people who've taken extra steps to obfuscate any metadata identifiers). They're interested in keeping their garden wall high enough (and their garden attractive enough) that most people don't try to leave. They're not interested in pursuing--let alone punishing--the trivial number of people who hop their wall. It's not in their best interest. Last edited by DiapDealer; 11-01-2018 at 01:03 PM. |
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#96 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 91577715
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Charlottesville, VA
Device: Kindles
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#97 |
Member
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Join Date: Oct 2018
Device: None
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If Amazon ever does feel compelled the compulsion will be economic or legal. They won't be compelled by principles.
They are certainly capable of surveying Kindle devices via phone-home and estimating the loss of revenue. Not sure how much it effects books but I am quite convinced the failure of DRM has had significant affect on the music industry so could be ebooks too. I am by no means arguing that they will. Only that they could....and other devices like laptops could not. |
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#98 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: New England
Device: PW 1, 2, 3, Voyage, Oasis 2 & 3, Fires, Aura HD, iPad
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Quote:
Shari |
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#99 | |
Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Oct 2018
Device: None
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Quote:
However.... Nobody controls what programs, or indeed what drivers, a user chooses to install on a laptop. Once a legal copy of an Ebook is on a laptop it can be read. The ouput of the reader goes to a video driver and that driver is not protected. If no easier method is found then an altered video driver can pass the output to another program which can write a DRM free copy of the book. That DRM free copy can be released to the net. So in principle, all the DRM ensures is the payment of a single licence. |
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#100 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 70314280
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Atlanta, GA
Device: iPad Pro, iPad mini, Kobo Aura, Amazon paperwhite, Sony PRS-T2
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Quote:
DRM is for the most part a publisher decision. I doubt Amazon cares all that much as long as you buy the books from them. The vast majority of ebook buyers are fine with the walled garden of Kindle, Books and Kubo. I suspect that Nook buyers might not be real happy when B&N finally shuts down the Nook. TOR went DRM free back in 2012. That's 6 years of data. Given TOR hasn't slapped DRM back on, I suspect that they aren't seeing a significant loss of sales to piracy. Indeed they say they haven't. Baen, of course, has always been DRM free. Last edited by pwalker8; 11-04-2018 at 03:10 PM. |
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#101 |
Wizard
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Karma: 13399999
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: US
Device: Nook Simple Touch, Kobo Glo HD, Kobo Clara HD, Kindle 4
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A decade or more ago, there used to be at least one usenet feed where people posted ebook versions scanned from paper. I looked at a few, they usually were pretty bad, scanned but poorly proofread. After the publishers finally gave up and started selling ebooks of all of their catalog, I think the feeds morphed into ebooks from cracked DRM. If the publishers were to switch to a DRM system that is much harder to crack, I suspect that most DRM breakers would switch to whatever retailer(s) sell versions that are still breakable and they would not go back to scanning.
It would take a long time to switch. Amazon, B&N and Kobo probably sell a lot of their ebooks to consumers with ereaders that they don't sell anymore, and switching to a DRM still that those ereaders can't read would cause a lot of bad press and unhappy customers who might chose to buy a reader from a different walled garden instead of upgrading. Macmillan and Baen aren't the only ones to go DRM-free. Simon & Schuster's Saga SF line did too. Macmillan seems to be more concerned about libraries, they added a 6 month window between publication date and ebooks available from libraries. I think that if B&N gives up on the Nook, they'll do what Sony did, and sell the customer base to Kobo. Even if Kobo only gives them a pittance, it's better than shutting down without anything to show for it. Last edited by bgalbrecht; 11-04-2018 at 04:20 PM. |
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#102 |
Bibliophagist
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Vancouver
Device: Kobo Sage, Libra Colour, Lenovo M8 FHD, Paperwhite 4, Tolino epos
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I seem to remember the person who used his Canon DSLR to take the pictures of every page in Harry Potter 7 got caught because he didn't strip the EXIF information so his camera serial number was exposed to everyone.
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#103 | |
Banned
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Karma: 1752814
Join Date: Jan 2008
Device: Sony Reader PRS-505 : Onyx Boox Max : Sony PRS-900 : Onyx Kepler Pro
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People would just load alternative firmware or buy different devices. The majority of my devices are format agnostic. |
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#104 | |
Banned
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Karma: 1752814
Join Date: Jan 2008
Device: Sony Reader PRS-505 : Onyx Boox Max : Sony PRS-900 : Onyx Kepler Pro
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Quote:
Why would I buy such a device? I would sooner buy a Chinese device with no DRM at all. Also, should note that the same tricks used to protect software fail the same ways. Once I have the device, I *have* the device. If I can't root it, why bother buying it? |
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#105 | |
Banned
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Karma: 1752814
Join Date: Jan 2008
Device: Sony Reader PRS-505 : Onyx Boox Max : Sony PRS-900 : Onyx Kepler Pro
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Quote:
Most people who are inclined towards that sort of thing are pretty hip to that EXIF data trick. It's fairly easy to remove but you do have to be aware of it. Of course, metatdata has been tripping noobs up since the Microsoft word days when they embedded a unique id in word docs. |
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