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Amazon tightens the digital handcuffs
Submitted by Greg Farough on March 5, 2025 - 8:48am
One of the most noteworthy events in the history of Digital
Restrictions Management (DRM) was Amazon's Orwellian deletion of
George Orwell's 1984 from its customers' e-readers. Ever since then,
it's been a touchstone of anti-DRM activism, giving users yet
another reason to avoid the "Swindle", as if its proprietary
software isn't enough. Just last week, Amazon showed that its
campaign against literacy is still very much alive by depriving
users with older Kindles (i.e. loyal customers) of the ability to transfer
e-books to their devices via USB. As the oldest models of the devices
don't have wireless cards, this was the only officially supported
method of transferring new books over to the device. (Thankfully,
free software able to do this exact thing has existed for years.)
This isn't the only hurdle Kindle users have had to suffer during the
lifetime of the device. Amazon still encumbers books purchased through
its site with DRM, putting artificial limitations on who you can
share your book with and when. Without this basic commitment to
shareability, something "dead tree" books have had since their
inception, is it really any surprise that Amazon seems intent on
adding to global e-waste by making these devices "officially" useless?
Even if a user has a perfectly functioning device, which can transfer
text files (also known as e-books) just as well as when it was first
released, Amazon would have her limited to the books she's already
purchased. Imagine an old but sturdy bookshelf, one with plenty of
unused space on it -- and now imagine some petty bureaucrat coming in
to tell you that you can't put any more books on it. Amazon's removing
"download and transfer" makes just as little sense.
Users deserve more. Not only should the programs which power their
devices be free software, but they shouldn't be arbitrarily
limited in what they can do with files on their machines, no matter
whether that file's contents are home movies, tax documents, or the
complete works of George Orwell. Given its origins as a bookseller,
Amazon should know better; given its current status as a panoptic
corporation, we can't say we're surprised.
Keep doing the right thing. Purchase e-books from sellers that
respect your freedom, and don't support Amazon's attack on reading.
●Greg Farough's blog
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Quote
...trying to make digital files uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet.
Bruce Schneier
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