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#31 |
Chocolate Grasshopper ...
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Karma: 20821184
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Scotland
Device: Muse HD , Cybook Gen3 , Pocketbook 302 (Black) , Nexus 10: wife has PW
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#32 | ||
Wizard
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Karma: 12000
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Texas, USA
Device: Kindle; Sony PRS 505; Blackberry 8700C
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#33 |
eBook Enthusiast
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Karma: 93383043
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: UK
Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6
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#34 | ||
Wizard
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Karma: 12205348
Join Date: Mar 2008
Device: Galaxy S, Nook w/CM7
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#35 |
Zealot
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Karma: 77
Join Date: May 2009
Device: Kindle2
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<baffled>
My planned strategy with the K2 was to order a book, DL to the K2, read it, then store it on the computer to keep my Kindle-bound books down to a reasonable number. I thought I would then load the book back from the computer to the K2 if I wanted to re-read. (Assume here a book purchased for cash money from Amazon, not a freebie or Gutenberg or equiv.) So, if I remove a book from the K2 and store it on the computer, I will _not_ be able to reload it in a readable form back on the K2? I would then have to either re-purchase the book, re-download from Amazon, or remove the existing file's DRM? Do I have this scenario correct? thx! Don |
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#36 | |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Karma: 315126578
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Norfolk, England
Device: Kindle Oasis
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But if your K2 gets replaced, you'll need to be able to download again from Amazon. (Or strip the DRM.) |
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#37 | |
reader
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Karma: 5183568
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Mississippi, USA
Device: Kindle 3, Kobo Glo HD
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Quote:
In most cases Amazon will keep a copy of all your ebooks purchased from them on their servers (or actually a database entry that you own the ebook and can download it). The reason for saving your own copy is because anything can happen to Amazon given enough time or to an individual ebook (e.g. the publisher can pull it from Amazon). Also if you have a copy, and the PID for your K2, then you can always strip the DRM later if you need to. Note that so far even if a publisher pulls an ebook, my experience has been that you can still redownload it to an existing Kindle, but I doubt that you can then download it to a new Kindle. In any case, the general rule is don't trust a DRM provider - they always screw you in the end. |
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#38 | |
Gadget Geek
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Karma: 22221
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: Paperwhite, Kindle 3 (retired), Skindle 1.2 (retired)
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Your Kindle has a unique ID called a PID. When you bought that book, it registered one license to that PID. The book file you have is encrypted using that PID. If you tried to take that file and copy it over to another Kindle, that Kindle wouldn't be able to open it because it has a different PID. If you registered that second Kindle to your account, you could download a copy for it. That uses another one of your licenses. Some people have multiple Kindles, or they've upgraded and gotten rid of their old one, or they've added iPhones to their account, or they've had to return a Kindle. If they downloaded books to all of these, they could easily have exhausted the licenses for some of them. Fortunately, as SirBruce said, Amazon will free up licenses for you if you contact them an explain that you no longer have the devices that you registered for them. |
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#39 | |
Groupie
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Karma: 112134
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Device: iPad, K3, K4, T1
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How is that done? I realize that, depending on where you are, it might not be quite kosher to answer that in an open forum but perhaps through a personal message? |
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#40 |
reader
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Karma: 5183568
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Mississippi, USA
Device: Kindle 3, Kobo Glo HD
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For a Kindle, you first need its PID (see kindlepid/kindlefix 0.2) then another python script, mobidedrm.py, will strip the DRM creating a DRM-free MOBI. This only works for AZW ebooks, and note that some AZWs are already DRM-free and just need renaming from .azw to .mobi.
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#41 | |
Groupie
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Karma: 112134
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Device: iPad, K3, K4, T1
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#42 |
Groupie
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Karma: 112134
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Kuala Lumpur
Device: iPad, K3, K4, T1
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That was an interesting read. Stripping the DRM not for me - I just hope that neither company every goes out of business or that, if they were, I would then have legal means of ensuring my purchased content could be read on other devices.
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#43 |
Evangelist
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Karma: 890
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: USA
Device: whatever
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An update to this story is posted on Consumerist: Amazon Tries to Clarify Download Limits For Kindle Books, Doesn't Quite Succeed
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#44 | |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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Karma: 315126578
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Norfolk, England
Device: Kindle Oasis
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It's not necessary for Amazon to go out of business for your DRMed ebooks to become unreadable. Amazon can be in business selling Kindles and DRMed ebooks, and you can still lose access to your DRMed ebooks.
A similar thing recently really happened with Fictionwise - one of their suppliers stopped supplying them, and customers with books from that supplier could no longer download new copies. If you want to keep your ebooks for the long term, you have two choices.
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#45 |
Provocateur
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Karma: 505847
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Columbus, OH
Device: Kindle Touch, Kindle 2, Kindle DX, iPhone 3GS
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The law in the US allows you to strip the DRM from software in such cases; it seems like it would apply to ebooks as well.
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