I can't blame Amazon specifically for it, but it is amazing how the wider tech industry is simultaneously pushing DRM down our throats and scraping/pirating any content they can find for training AI.
I did not look toe matter up in detail, but I am astonished as well in regard to this development. A grab for control over basic devices and a mass robbing of the commons.
There is no strong political pushback from the parties/voters to this large scale collective theft of IP by cooperations, is there?
I would expect some sort of taxation and redistribution to the content creators like there is with music content etc.
Funny you should say hiding in the woods. The closing scene in the film of Fahrenheit 451 is a group of people preserving books by memorising them and hiding in the woods.
If you have trouble spilling uninvited diagnosis for Internet strangers, start with yourself, yeah.
I have no issues with the author mentioning the film, not the book. I was rather curious why not the book, but the film, solely because of this ‘wood’ story told in both. The author said they haven’t finished the book yet, so that’s fine with me. I just find it ironic they did not mention the book (and the author too), considering the story it tells.
"things you own" is a more complex concept than most people give it credit for.
If for instance you consider anything that can be legally and uniterraly taken away from you as not owned, that definition becomes really really small, short of you being a diplomat or some special entity.
Many see "owning" things in a more colloquial way, but that's also how Amazon gets by with their shenanigans, as it still feels like ownership day to day.
You are on: can you explain how anyone can legally and unilaterally take away my fully paid car? After that can you explain how can anyone legally and unilaterally take away my mortgaged home? Just curious. (If still interested in this game, can you explain how anyone can take away my books? This is closer to the topic at hand)
As sister comment points out, civil forfeiture is one. Your car being involved in a criminal investigation and getting saved for perpetuity as evidence would be another.
Funnier examples: let's say it's a self driving car, as you proudly admire your brand new car delivered car, firmware is overwritten by error and is sent to another home, who also closes the delivery. Factory management software is buggy as hell and your car got reassigned some random info of another lost car, but marked as delivered to you anyway, so the burden of proof is now on your side.
You might be fighting that car maker in court for the rest of your life without ever seeing any compensation or getting back "your" car.
> mortgaged home
If it's mortgaged it's just not yours in the first place. I'm sure you have clauses in your loan contract detailing how the loaner can unilateraly decide that circumstances changed, you're now too much of a risk, and request near inmediate full repay of the rest of loan or else they liquidate the property.
Land laws have also their funnier clauses, where someone squatting your property for a decade can request legal ownership, depending on the local arrangements.
> The 15.18.5 update is also having an adverse reaction to sideloaded books. If you deliver a book using Send by Email or copy it to your computer via USB, a critical issue may arise, where a pop-up appears with an ‘Invalid ASIN‘ number. The new DRM system is attempting to locate the book in the Amazon store to decrypt it, but since it can’t find it, it reports that the book is invalid. Amazon claims they are working on the issue, but preventing sideloading would be downright tyrannical.
Ouch. This is how I deliver a lot of my DRM-free purchases to the Kindle app.
There are plenty of ebook stores if you google around, that have a standard range and use Adobe DRM, so off the bat wouldn't work on a kindle. In theory you can remove that DRM using Calibre, but I haven't tried.
Other than that, not really? There are plenty of ways in which you can buy _a_ drm free book, but not some large range (or even bandcamp-quality range, where there are authors you've heard of, just not Dan Brown / Stephen King sized ones) site.
I haven't got around to solving this problem so am also interested. I already own a kindle, I don't want to generate ewaste by changing physical device.
Was impacted by invalid ASIN pop up. Got fed up finally. Sold my kindle paperwhite via classifieds to someone who would embrace the Amazon walled garden (so someone new e-reading). Then bought a pocketbook. Now all my ebooks work again. And no waste. I use beam ebooks for drm free books. Bought all my Expanse books there.
I own an Onyx Poke and I buy my books at kobo. They work just fine. With a jailbroken Kindle capable of processing EPUB this should (!) work. Give it a try with an inexpensive book, maybe?
I buy ebooks outside Amazon with my non-jailbroken Kindle. They’re usually DRM’d EPUB files, which I unDRM with Calibre and transfer to my device, which I have kept in airplane mode for the better part of a year.
The bonus part is Calibre keeps a local copy on your PC, so now all my book purchases are backupped and without DRM.
Borrow from the library! Kobo has library borrowing built right into the device if you're in the US and can use Overdrive/Libby. Otherwise, you can use the Libby app to send the book to your Kindle.
I bought a Kindle Oasis 1st gen when it came out, got it replaced by Amazon with gen 2 and I liked it as long as I could sideload books and strip DRM off of my Kindle "license purchases" but I anticipated the recent moves by Amazon and looked for alternatives, knowing that I'd probably have to love with some compromises, especially in terms of build quality and feel. Looked at Kobo, Onyx, etc but none really convinced me, especially when I saw most of them being stuck on Android 11. When I heard of the Daylight Computer DC-1 something clicked. The smooth display, readability in daylight, none of the cons of rink (except being gray scale), the blue light free display, Android 13 with 16 being on the horizon. Downsides are the uneven display borders, higher battery usage when the display is powered on/no always on display and the rather flimsy feeling of the back cover. DPI is a bit below modern ereaders as well. I'm still happy I went with it. It's now my daily carry for writing in the cafe, scribbling down notes with the included pen and its the best device I ever used to read PDFs and scanned books from archive.org that aren't downloadable.
Lots of cons still but no one is going to pull your ebooks from your device and it's still their 1st gen and only device they have. I just hope they ship export functionality for their custom app so that you can keep local copies of the documents you send to their backend.
It's great this was mentioned in a podcast once which got me curious about it in the first place. And without the blue lights you actually can read in bed without ruining your circadian rhythm.
Just buy a Kobo. You can get a new one, you don't have to jailbreak it to run Koreader, it already actually ePubs out of the box, they don't have as aggressive DRM either. And the hardware is good.
My Onyx Poke 5 is better than every Kindle I’ve owned.
It’s super compact (great for travel), has a good screen, reads anything I’ve thrown at it, runs Android apps, and is simple to send files to over its (local) web interface.
Thankfully I deDRM'd most of my Kindle books last year or so, so I can read them in Braille on my Braille display without needing to connect to my phone and use the Kindle app. Also luckily for me it's legal for me to do that since I'm blind. One of the few perks I guess.
+1. I have two Boox devices and they're both excellent. One is a 10 inch reader that's quite thin, and the other is essentially the equivalent of an e-ink phone. Where to buy books is still a challenge for me, though. So far I've been relying on my decrypted library that I've been buying over the years, but now that Amazon closed that hole, I'm no longer buying from them.
I don't have a good answer for you, I'm afraid. I'm gonna be looking into alternative stores that still allow you to download the files. I've never worked with Kobo before, but I heard that that could work. Google Play can work. And there's always Anna's archive, that's kind of a last resort for me. I prefer to pay for high-quality copies than get some scanned low-quality version, but publishers don't want to sell me a file anymore.
Did the same. The Kindle app has a page-turn effect that can't be turned off, though, so I switched to KOReader. Unintuitive interface but fantastic for book reading.
I don't see any incentive for Amazon to do that.
Even if you do not buy any books from Amazon you still paid them for the Kindle. And if you have a Kindle you might buy the odd book from them.
Also the Kindle is marketed as allowing you to put your own documents on it.
Yes Amazon want to stop you reading books licensed from then on anything but a Kindle but not the other way around.
As I understand it they don't make much money from the sale of the Kindle itself as they want to lock you into their ebook ecosystem which is where they make their money. I don't have hard figures though.
They may market it like that now, but that can change. If Google can stop you sideloading apps on Android, I have no doubt Amazon could try to stop you sideloading books on your Kindle.
And before that you need a congress that will pass legislation to prevent such cases or even allow existing laws to be applied by not actively intervening.
I’ve personally found reading on an iPad mini to be great. You can use Libby, Apple Books, Kindle, or whatever else floats your boat.
Get that it’s not e-ink, but I’ve found a setting that does not fatigue me (black text on tan background - just like hacker news!) and have never looked back.
What is the role of "software updates" in this "war"
This phrase "software update" is mentioned several times
Usually this refers to soneone other than the comuter owner being able to remotely access and install software on the owner's computer, often without the explicit, non-compulsory consent of the owner
Not sure what they were thinking, but for a long time if you mixed side loaded books with kindle ones, the front cover would go missing from the side loaded when it synced. I've never let my kindle hit the web after I converted by Amazon purchases.
I bought some ebooks from other vendors to avoid lock-in and side-loaded them on my kindle. Last year, if Amazon sold one of these titles it would dissappear if I turned on wifi. I now have a kobo.
I am guessing this works for you because more people reading = more people talking = more readers discovering and potential sales?
It would be interesting to see at what point of notoriety that is no longer true. Like is this still a factor for Stephen King, or at that point is it really just lost sales?
As for scale... There is only a tiny fraction of the industry that can support their life on writer's income, let alone be a household name.
It probably does become just lost sales at that point, but to reach that, you're probably already beyond most competitive forces, leaving only piracy around.
Some of my publishers are, as they're American. I'm unlikely to see any of that.
Unfortunately, I'm Australian, and my government saw fit to narrow their interpretation of current laws, to make AI scraping of illegally obtained data, legal.
You now have to prove direct harm - not the indirect harm happening to the entire industry.
>The more people who pirate my books, the greater my sales across all platforms.
You think more piracy leads to more sales, but surely this is correlation, not causation? It seems far more plausible that popular books get pirated and bought more, hence the correlation.
It could be pure correlation if you, personally, are a household name. If you're secretly Stephen King commenting on Hacker News, then yes, exposure isn't going to help you.
But if you're not Stephen King, then more piracy is going to make a direct, causal, positive impact on your sales.
Piracy -> Friendly ways to buy -> Unfriendly ways to buy -> Piracy -> ...
Unfortunately, giving money back to writers involves hopping through piracy. At that point, a new, consumer-friendly service will sprout up. Everyone will use it.
Over time, the service will want to profit-maximize, and will adopt anti-consumer techniques. Leading people to go to Pirate Bay. Leading to friendly services.
How many times has this happened, such that it can be called a cycle?
There are other possibilities, such as people simply not writing as much anymore, or higher quality writers existing the market due to lack of sufficient return.
Bad DRM led to Napster led to Netflix lead to a fragmentation of services led to a resurgence of piracy.
Similar thing happened with music, only rather than piracy, it landed on legal / free (e.g. Youtube). Youtube is just starting to do the consumer-unfriendly thing (but it's got a long ways to go before piracy comes out competitive).
Similar in books.
I'll mention: A lot of these are consumer-unfriendly in some ways (e.g. Netflix DRM), but friendly in others. $20/month for all the movies you can watch beats piracy.
I wasn't sure how it works where I live, so I looked it up and apparently in Germany (according to Wikipedia) public libraries pay 3-4c per checkout to a central private body which redistributes it somehow.
So unless the book is checked out a thousand times over and its lifetime, buying it still dominates overall.
Instead of lining bezos pockets get your ebooks from above sources and go to a real bookshop to buy hard copies of books you like especially - you can give them away and so support the actual author while not supporting bozo
I pirate all the books, I treat that as a public library. I don’t read most of them. The ones I have read and found good, I talk about them, write about them, and I can buy them. For myself, plus as gifts to others. I just dislike buying highly marketed book that turned out to be useless.
If I’ll ever to become an author myself, I don’t see any issue with that.
I use the local public library from time to time (physical/via Libby) while reading on my kindle otherwise. Libby is something else, but for the physical books, I just see zero difference between going to the library in person, checking it out and returning it later vs just pirating it online. It's not like the publisher does not get any more money. OK there is a difference where there is a limit to the number of copies available, so some people have to wait, just typical of public resources. But I noticed that most books I borrow are always available, especially with interlibrary borrowing. So what difference does it make?
In the end I pirated more often. I am not proud of that, but I also don't see how any of this makes any difference. It's not like I'll ever buy the book with my own money.
I was kind of mystified by Amazon's move against downloading Kindle books, since ebooks on Anna's Archive are of much lower quality. Wherever they're coming from, it's not Amazon.
Could you explain?
From my experience, they are exact digital copies of the ebooks on amazon. It’s not like mp3 in lower audio quality, it’s word by word the same book.
I tried downloading several Dresden Files ebooks from Anna's Archive. They contain various difficult-to-understand errors including word substitutions that tend to ruin the text. AA offers several editions, but they appeared to be the same error-filled book in different file formats. The errors are not present in the Kindle editions of the same books.
Good. Now it's more clear for users that putting all your reading-eggs in the basket of a nasty tech-company, is not ok. Glad I removed my Amazon account a long time ago
Update: I took a look at a Kindle scribe. The only layout options are portrait and landscape. I could not find a two page option. The Scribe is updated to the latest software.
While dictionaries are often reliable enough to get the correct words back when some glyphs are misrecognised I wonder if some type of LLM would help in some cases. Not a worry in modern digital first documents though.
You don't? Think about it. If your picture/source data is not perfectly clear ... what do you want? We all want perfection, but if you can't have that ...
Would you prefer what current OCR does and just suddenly sentences go 2#!@%7Q&*@3 ladfk !@$?
Or would you rather have a reasonable completion of a sentence that is nearly always (but not quite always) correct, that even actually takes the context into account?
> Would you prefer what current OCR does and just suddenly sentences go 2#!@%7Q&*@3 ladfk !@$?
Yes, actually. I'd rather be aware that the OCR tool failed somewhere than have the tool silently fabricate part of the text, or "correct" perceived errors which were present in the source document.
But you aren't aware, because the OCR doesn't know that it failed. You would have to go through the entire text by hand to fix the corruptions, but that's too much work, so you won't, and the corruptions stay in.
In practice and at scale, the guesses of the LLM are the superior outcome.
> But you aren't aware, because the OCR doesn't know that it failed. You would have to go through the entire text by hand to fix the corruptions, but that's too much work, so you won't, and the corruptions stay in.
Well, if you assume that you're never going to read the book, then sure. But in that case it's even more efficient to not OCR the book either. You'll never know the difference.
If you do read the book, you'll know where the failures are. And they're easy to correct if you can edit the document. I usually file reports of printing errors in Kindle books when I encounter them.
I have. Hell, these days, both ChatGPT-5 and GPT-OSS are very good at taking my writing (as in paper writing) and, as long as you specify step-by-step what to do, get it through. Either discussing those with me in voice, or correcting assignments I make on paper. I use it to practice language and math.
Oh, and to pirate textbooks. The issue is that an LLM-entered (as in in context) version of part of a textbook is something that I can talk to, write to, and have it judge my skills. Normally I'd have to find someone who'd be willing to spend a short time talking to me about a subject, and correct me, and who's willing to spend hours correcting assignments from me. Even when paying, that's essentially unavailable.
Now I take a few pages, let's say up to a chapter but usually less, load it into ChatGPT-5, tell it to ask me progressively harder questions when I activate voice mode. Or I take one of those for-teacher "how to grade X" notes, write an assignment, scan the whole thing into ChatGPT, and tell it to correct my assignment, justifying everything on the teacher note and deliver a final grade. I tell it to be way too strict, and this has helped me, among other things, get very good, and one perfect score on language certs. I can prove that I am fluent in 4 languages (en, fr, de, and my mother tongue). If we're talking anything but specialized language it's even true.
I can't blame Amazon specifically for it, but it is amazing how the wider tech industry is simultaneously pushing DRM down our throats and scraping/pirating any content they can find for training AI.
I did not look toe matter up in detail, but I am astonished as well in regard to this development. A grab for control over basic devices and a mass robbing of the commons.
There is no strong political pushback from the parties/voters to this large scale collective theft of IP by cooperations, is there?
I would expect some sort of taxation and redistribution to the content creators like there is with music content etc.
The simple message is "Don't spend your money on things you don't really own, because you'll be at forever war with the lenders".
Last stop on this train is either "seize the means of production" or hiding in the woods
Funny you should say hiding in the woods. The closing scene in the film of Fahrenheit 451 is a group of people preserving books by memorising them and hiding in the woods.
Why did you mention the film, not the book? Considering the closing scene is the same, iirc.
If you have trouble letting people mention a movie, you're a part of the problem
If you have trouble spilling uninvited diagnosis for Internet strangers, start with yourself, yeah.
I have no issues with the author mentioning the film, not the book. I was rather curious why not the book, but the film, solely because of this ‘wood’ story told in both. The author said they haven’t finished the book yet, so that’s fine with me. I just find it ironic they did not mention the book (and the author too), considering the story it tells.
I haven't finished reading the book yet. I realise the irony in that.
The first stop is seize the things you bought apparently
First step is to not sell anything, and let you pay for an indefinite license.
You already have access to means of production of ebooks... No need to steal
Please expand on what you mean here
"things you own" is a more complex concept than most people give it credit for.
If for instance you consider anything that can be legally and uniterraly taken away from you as not owned, that definition becomes really really small, short of you being a diplomat or some special entity.
Many see "owning" things in a more colloquial way, but that's also how Amazon gets by with their shenanigans, as it still feels like ownership day to day.
You are on: can you explain how anyone can legally and unilaterally take away my fully paid car? After that can you explain how can anyone legally and unilaterally take away my mortgaged home? Just curious. (If still interested in this game, can you explain how anyone can take away my books? This is closer to the topic at hand)
> car
As sister comment points out, civil forfeiture is one. Your car being involved in a criminal investigation and getting saved for perpetuity as evidence would be another.
Funnier examples: let's say it's a self driving car, as you proudly admire your brand new car delivered car, firmware is overwritten by error and is sent to another home, who also closes the delivery. Factory management software is buggy as hell and your car got reassigned some random info of another lost car, but marked as delivered to you anyway, so the burden of proof is now on your side.
You might be fighting that car maker in court for the rest of your life without ever seeing any compensation or getting back "your" car.
> mortgaged home
If it's mortgaged it's just not yours in the first place. I'm sure you have clauses in your loan contract detailing how the loaner can unilateraly decide that circumstances changed, you're now too much of a risk, and request near inmediate full repay of the rest of loan or else they liquidate the property.
Land laws have also their funnier clauses, where someone squatting your property for a decade can request legal ownership, depending on the local arrangements.
Look up civil forfeiture.
> The 15.18.5 update is also having an adverse reaction to sideloaded books. If you deliver a book using Send by Email or copy it to your computer via USB, a critical issue may arise, where a pop-up appears with an ‘Invalid ASIN‘ number. The new DRM system is attempting to locate the book in the Amazon store to decrypt it, but since it can’t find it, it reports that the book is invalid. Amazon claims they are working on the issue, but preventing sideloading would be downright tyrannical.
Ouch. This is how I deliver a lot of my DRM-free purchases to the Kindle app.
I used to use the kindle email but I find https://www.amazon.com/sendtokindle much easier (and it allows larger files than email).
Honest question. Where can I buy ebooks outside Amazon to use with my jailbroken Kindle? Is there a Bandcamp for books?
I want properly created files the kindle can render with the options I want, not a pdf that forces a layout.
There are plenty of ebook stores if you google around, that have a standard range and use Adobe DRM, so off the bat wouldn't work on a kindle. In theory you can remove that DRM using Calibre, but I haven't tried.
Other than that, not really? There are plenty of ways in which you can buy _a_ drm free book, but not some large range (or even bandcamp-quality range, where there are authors you've heard of, just not Dan Brown / Stephen King sized ones) site.
I haven't got around to solving this problem so am also interested. I already own a kindle, I don't want to generate ewaste by changing physical device.
Was impacted by invalid ASIN pop up. Got fed up finally. Sold my kindle paperwhite via classifieds to someone who would embrace the Amazon walled garden (so someone new e-reading). Then bought a pocketbook. Now all my ebooks work again. And no waste. I use beam ebooks for drm free books. Bought all my Expanse books there.
I googled, and it seems Kobo can? But I don't own a Kobo to test it.
https://help.kobo.com/hc/en-us/articles/360019527954-Downloa...
I have a Kobo. Yes, you can download books you buy from them to any device. They are Epubs with DRM.
I own an Onyx Poke and I buy my books at kobo. They work just fine. With a jailbroken Kindle capable of processing EPUB this should (!) work. Give it a try with an inexpensive book, maybe?
I buy ebooks outside Amazon with my non-jailbroken Kindle. They’re usually DRM’d EPUB files, which I unDRM with Calibre and transfer to my device, which I have kept in airplane mode for the better part of a year.
The bonus part is Calibre keeps a local copy on your PC, so now all my book purchases are backupped and without DRM.
well ok so can you answer the actual question then
Borrow from the library! Kobo has library borrowing built right into the device if you're in the US and can use Overdrive/Libby. Otherwise, you can use the Libby app to send the book to your Kindle.
ebooks.com is what I use. Their books use Adobe DRM, but that's easy to remove. I'll go to the publisher's website directly otherwise.
Individual authors often provide alternative purchase options
I switched to Pocketbook. Removing DRM from e-books bought outside of Amazon was trivial.
I bought a Kindle Oasis 1st gen when it came out, got it replaced by Amazon with gen 2 and I liked it as long as I could sideload books and strip DRM off of my Kindle "license purchases" but I anticipated the recent moves by Amazon and looked for alternatives, knowing that I'd probably have to love with some compromises, especially in terms of build quality and feel. Looked at Kobo, Onyx, etc but none really convinced me, especially when I saw most of them being stuck on Android 11. When I heard of the Daylight Computer DC-1 something clicked. The smooth display, readability in daylight, none of the cons of rink (except being gray scale), the blue light free display, Android 13 with 16 being on the horizon. Downsides are the uneven display borders, higher battery usage when the display is powered on/no always on display and the rather flimsy feeling of the back cover. DPI is a bit below modern ereaders as well. I'm still happy I went with it. It's now my daily carry for writing in the cafe, scribbling down notes with the included pen and its the best device I ever used to read PDFs and scanned books from archive.org that aren't downloadable.
Lots of cons still but no one is going to pull your ebooks from your device and it's still their 1st gen and only device they have. I just hope they ship export functionality for their custom app so that you can keep local copies of the documents you send to their backend.
It's great this was mentioned in a podcast once which got me curious about it in the first place. And without the blue lights you actually can read in bed without ruining your circadian rhythm.
Made copies of most of mine before their last lockdown kicked in.
That said still buying. Their daily sales are (occasionally) just too good value for money even of if I know it’s locked.
Just buy an old kindle. Mod it and get koreader running on it. Then put it in airplane mode and load books via USB from whatever source you like.
Its great hardware.
Just buy a Kobo. You can get a new one, you don't have to jailbreak it to run Koreader, it already actually ePubs out of the box, they don't have as aggressive DRM either. And the hardware is good.
My Onyx Poke 5 is better than every Kindle I’ve owned.
It’s super compact (great for travel), has a good screen, reads anything I’ve thrown at it, runs Android apps, and is simple to send files to over its (local) web interface.
Thankfully I deDRM'd most of my Kindle books last year or so, so I can read them in Braille on my Braille display without needing to connect to my phone and use the Kindle app. Also luckily for me it's legal for me to do that since I'm blind. One of the few perks I guess.
At least e-Ink screens are becoming cheaper and better so there'll be plenty of alternatives if they block side-loading.
I switched from Kindle to Boox. Boox eink tablet can still run Kindle the Android app, but overall it is much better device.
+1. I have two Boox devices and they're both excellent. One is a 10 inch reader that's quite thin, and the other is essentially the equivalent of an e-ink phone. Where to buy books is still a challenge for me, though. So far I've been relying on my decrypted library that I've been buying over the years, but now that Amazon closed that hole, I'm no longer buying from them.
What are the best alternatives for Kindle store?
I don't have a good answer for you, I'm afraid. I'm gonna be looking into alternative stores that still allow you to download the files. I've never worked with Kobo before, but I heard that that could work. Google Play can work. And there's always Anna's archive, that's kind of a last resort for me. I prefer to pay for high-quality copies than get some scanned low-quality version, but publishers don't want to sell me a file anymore.
ebooks.com, kobo.com or the publisher's website.
Did the same. The Kindle app has a page-turn effect that can't be turned off, though, so I switched to KOReader. Unintuitive interface but fantastic for book reading.
Second this. It's got an Onyx Boox and it's been amazing.
Kobo is another option too, and it’s easy to control and manage.
I don't see any incentive for Amazon to do that. Even if you do not buy any books from Amazon you still paid them for the Kindle. And if you have a Kindle you might buy the odd book from them.
Also the Kindle is marketed as allowing you to put your own documents on it.
Yes Amazon want to stop you reading books licensed from then on anything but a Kindle but not the other way around.
As I understand it they don't make much money from the sale of the Kindle itself as they want to lock you into their ebook ecosystem which is where they make their money. I don't have hard figures though.
They may market it like that now, but that can change. If Google can stop you sideloading apps on Android, I have no doubt Amazon could try to stop you sideloading books on your Kindle.
This will be a nice foundation for an anti trust case.
1) sell device at break even/loss to gain market share
2) retrospectively lock out all content not from amazon
Now you just need a legal system that will pursue anti trust cases
And before that you need a congress that will pass legislation to prevent such cases or even allow existing laws to be applied by not actively intervening.
Where are you going to get the books from, if Amazon doesn't let you download them?
Kobo, Google Play Books, smaller niche sites like Baen, Humble Bundle, J-novel club, etc.
They let you download books with no DRM (or with DRM that works with any reader)?
In the worst case, you can always buy it from Amazon and download it from Annas Archive
Or buy the physical book, download from AA, and give the book to charity when you’re done.
I don't want to give Amazon money for its anticonsumer practices, though, so I'll need to find something else.
Some have no DRM, like Baen, most Humble Bundles and J-novel club. Most books on Kobo/Google Play have DRM but it's really really easy to remove.
I’ve personally found reading on an iPad mini to be great. You can use Libby, Apple Books, Kindle, or whatever else floats your boat.
Get that it’s not e-ink, but I’ve found a setting that does not fatigue me (black text on tan background - just like hacker news!) and have never looked back.
Like my "smart" TCL Roku TV, I almost never allow my Kindle to connect to the internet.
When I do, I subsequently remove wifi passwords and delete the networks.
Additionally, I disable software updates if possible.
What is the role of "software updates" in this "war"
This phrase "software update" is mentioned several times
Usually this refers to soneone other than the comuter owner being able to remotely access and install software on the owner's computer, often without the explicit, non-compulsory consent of the owner
Not sure what they were thinking, but for a long time if you mixed side loaded books with kindle ones, the front cover would go missing from the side loaded when it synced. I've never let my kindle hit the web after I converted by Amazon purchases.
I bought some ebooks from other vendors to avoid lock-in and side-loaded them on my kindle. Last year, if Amazon sold one of these titles it would dissappear if I turned on wifi. I now have a kobo.
I just use libgen / Anna's Archive. No need to pay money to Amazon.
So how exactly pirating the books give money to the writers?
The more people who pirate my books, the greater my sales across all platforms. That's not hyperboly - its something I track.
Individuals who pirate my books are also more likely to buy them in the future.
Piracy is just about accessibility and trust. If the person can't afford to take a chance, they pirate. And if you win them there, they'll buy.
(Nit: Zero of that applies to corps. Thanks Anthropic, Meta, and everyone else.)
I am guessing this works for you because more people reading = more people talking = more readers discovering and potential sales?
It would be interesting to see at what point of notoriety that is no longer true. Like is this still a factor for Stephen King, or at that point is it really just lost sales?
That's my interpretation of it.
As for scale... There is only a tiny fraction of the industry that can support their life on writer's income, let alone be a household name.
It probably does become just lost sales at that point, but to reach that, you're probably already beyond most competitive forces, leaving only piracy around.
Are you looking forward to tens of ... dollars from that recent suit?
Some of my publishers are, as they're American. I'm unlikely to see any of that.
Unfortunately, I'm Australian, and my government saw fit to narrow their interpretation of current laws, to make AI scraping of illegally obtained data, legal.
You now have to prove direct harm - not the indirect harm happening to the entire industry.
Is non-AI-related scraping now legal too?
Only if the original data scraper gets permission. [0]
[0] https://www.oaic.gov.au/news/media-centre/global-expectation...
>The more people who pirate my books, the greater my sales across all platforms.
You think more piracy leads to more sales, but surely this is correlation, not causation? It seems far more plausible that popular books get pirated and bought more, hence the correlation.
I mostly sell by word of mouth. You've certainly never heard of my books before. I am in no way "popular".
Piracy creates an invested reader. Its not much different than games selling by offering free demos.
There is a _causation_ there, because the reader likely never would have discovered me, otherwise.
It could be pure correlation if you, personally, are a household name. If you're secretly Stephen King commenting on Hacker News, then yes, exposure isn't going to help you.
But if you're not Stephen King, then more piracy is going to make a direct, causal, positive impact on your sales.
The cycle has been:
Piracy -> Friendly ways to buy -> Unfriendly ways to buy -> Piracy -> ...
Unfortunately, giving money back to writers involves hopping through piracy. At that point, a new, consumer-friendly service will sprout up. Everyone will use it.
Over time, the service will want to profit-maximize, and will adopt anti-consumer techniques. Leading people to go to Pirate Bay. Leading to friendly services.
Rinse, repeat.
How many times has this happened, such that it can be called a cycle?
There are other possibilities, such as people simply not writing as much anymore, or higher quality writers existing the market due to lack of sufficient return.
Bad DRM led to Napster led to Netflix lead to a fragmentation of services led to a resurgence of piracy.
Similar thing happened with music, only rather than piracy, it landed on legal / free (e.g. Youtube). Youtube is just starting to do the consumer-unfriendly thing (but it's got a long ways to go before piracy comes out competitive).
Similar in books.
I'll mention: A lot of these are consumer-unfriendly in some ways (e.g. Netflix DRM), but friendly in others. $20/month for all the movies you can watch beats piracy.
It’s happened to some degree with music, movies, and TV shows.
Where in the message did he claim that pirating the books compensated the writers?
How different is it from going to a public library?
Almost every country in the world apart from the US pays authors for library lending.
I wasn't sure how it works where I live, so I looked it up and apparently in Germany (according to Wikipedia) public libraries pay 3-4c per checkout to a central private body which redistributes it somehow.
So unless the book is checked out a thousand times over and its lifetime, buying it still dominates overall.
The libraries also bought the book originally.
Instead of lining bezos pockets get your ebooks from above sources and go to a real bookshop to buy hard copies of books you like especially - you can give them away and so support the actual author while not supporting bozo
You should check out Chokepoint Capitalism by Cory Doctorow and Rebecca Giblin. To put it briefly, you've been fooled.
You're making an argument that empowers the likes of Amazon, not "writers", and it's by design that you've been fed that story.
I pirate all the books, I treat that as a public library. I don’t read most of them. The ones I have read and found good, I talk about them, write about them, and I can buy them. For myself, plus as gifts to others. I just dislike buying highly marketed book that turned out to be useless.
If I’ll ever to become an author myself, I don’t see any issue with that.
I use the local public library from time to time (physical/via Libby) while reading on my kindle otherwise. Libby is something else, but for the physical books, I just see zero difference between going to the library in person, checking it out and returning it later vs just pirating it online. It's not like the publisher does not get any more money. OK there is a difference where there is a limit to the number of copies available, so some people have to wait, just typical of public resources. But I noticed that most books I borrow are always available, especially with interlibrary borrowing. So what difference does it make?
In the end I pirated more often. I am not proud of that, but I also don't see how any of this makes any difference. It's not like I'll ever buy the book with my own money.
If they sell a PDF that I can download, then I'll give my money to them. But I'm not giving money for DRM.
Book authors should make money from concert ticket sales, not books. /s
How does that work? I used it once to look up an old book and ended up on Discord?
Reminiscent of #bookz on Undernet.
You post the code you received on the Discord channel, which replies with an actual link.
It works fine. You click a link, and the file downloads. I have no idea what you mean. Discord?..
I was kind of mystified by Amazon's move against downloading Kindle books, since ebooks on Anna's Archive are of much lower quality. Wherever they're coming from, it's not Amazon.
Could you explain? From my experience, they are exact digital copies of the ebooks on amazon. It’s not like mp3 in lower audio quality, it’s word by word the same book.
I tried downloading several Dresden Files ebooks from Anna's Archive. They contain various difficult-to-understand errors including word substitutions that tend to ruin the text. AA offers several editions, but they appeared to be the same error-filled book in different file formats. The errors are not present in the Kindle editions of the same books.
Still happily using a 4th gen D01100 with physical page turn buttons. Works fine with Calibre.
Precisely why I stopped buying eBooks from Amazon. DRM Kindle Unlimited books? Sure; makes sense. Books that I paid full price on? No way.
That's why I always have mine on airplane mode.
My second generation Paperwhite hasnt seen the internet in close to a decade. I use Calibre and source books from all over.
Their underlying problem is that the iPad and Android based tablets exist.
Not at all. Completely different use cases.
I own both. I'm not so sure.
If you're going to pirate books, it is easy enough to just do it on your iPad or purchase a Boox tablet.
I own an iPad and I've often considered getting a e-ink android tablet just for reading pdfs.
"If buying isn't owning, piracy isn't stealing."
To steal you have to take something from someone, i.e. deprive them of it, as well as acquire it for yourself.
Piracy can be illegal, may be considered unethical by some, but it definitely isn’t stealing.
Good. Now it's more clear for users that putting all your reading-eggs in the basket of a nasty tech-company, is not ok. Glad I removed my Amazon account a long time ago
I'd buy another Kindle if it displayed pages like a book - two pages, side by side.
KOReader can do it. But get a Kobo, not a Kindle.
The Kindle scribe does that
Update: I took a look at a Kindle scribe. The only layout options are portrait and landscape. I could not find a two page option. The Scribe is updated to the latest software.
It doesn't mention that in the Amazon page for it. Thanks for the info!
Luckily one thing LLMs with image input are ridiculously good at is piracy. You want to get a book off a kindle? Easier than with a real book, easily.
What amazon could block is getting books from other sources onto a kindle. But there's plenty of devices. I use an iPad.
An LLM? Just what I always wanted - an OCR tool that hallucinates.
While dictionaries are often reliable enough to get the correct words back when some glyphs are misrecognised I wonder if some type of LLM would help in some cases. Not a worry in modern digital first documents though.
You don't? Think about it. If your picture/source data is not perfectly clear ... what do you want? We all want perfection, but if you can't have that ...
Would you prefer what current OCR does and just suddenly sentences go 2#!@%7Q&*@3 ladfk !@$?
Or would you rather have a reasonable completion of a sentence that is nearly always (but not quite always) correct, that even actually takes the context into account?
> Would you prefer what current OCR does and just suddenly sentences go 2#!@%7Q&*@3 ladfk !@$?
Yes, actually. I'd rather be aware that the OCR tool failed somewhere than have the tool silently fabricate part of the text, or "correct" perceived errors which were present in the source document.
But you aren't aware, because the OCR doesn't know that it failed. You would have to go through the entire text by hand to fix the corruptions, but that's too much work, so you won't, and the corruptions stay in.
In practice and at scale, the guesses of the LLM are the superior outcome.
> But you aren't aware, because the OCR doesn't know that it failed. You would have to go through the entire text by hand to fix the corruptions, but that's too much work, so you won't, and the corruptions stay in.
Well, if you assume that you're never going to read the book, then sure. But in that case it's even more efficient to not OCR the book either. You'll never know the difference.
If you do read the book, you'll know where the failures are. And they're easy to correct if you can edit the document. I usually file reports of printing errors in Kindle books when I encounter them.
(Do the errors get corrected? No.)
Your picture of a ebook is perfectly clear.
I've tried to coax ChatGPT to do this but have not been successful beyond cover shots random page views.
I have. Hell, these days, both ChatGPT-5 and GPT-OSS are very good at taking my writing (as in paper writing) and, as long as you specify step-by-step what to do, get it through. Either discussing those with me in voice, or correcting assignments I make on paper. I use it to practice language and math.
Oh, and to pirate textbooks. The issue is that an LLM-entered (as in in context) version of part of a textbook is something that I can talk to, write to, and have it judge my skills. Normally I'd have to find someone who'd be willing to spend a short time talking to me about a subject, and correct me, and who's willing to spend hours correcting assignments from me. Even when paying, that's essentially unavailable.
Now I take a few pages, let's say up to a chapter but usually less, load it into ChatGPT-5, tell it to ask me progressively harder questions when I activate voice mode. Or I take one of those for-teacher "how to grade X" notes, write an assignment, scan the whole thing into ChatGPT, and tell it to correct my assignment, justifying everything on the teacher note and deliver a final grade. I tell it to be way too strict, and this has helped me, among other things, get very good, and one perfect score on language certs. I can prove that I am fluent in 4 languages (en, fr, de, and my mother tongue). If we're talking anything but specialized language it's even true.
>Draconian measures are being taken to prevent Kindle books from being downloaded
Using keys stored in hardware for DRM is industry standard. It's not draconian.
I have never bought a system that requires DRM. It may be a standard amongst those who use DRM, but DRM itself is far from universal.
Presuming it is industry-standard (not my industry, so I'm not about to concede the point), that doesn't make it less draconian.
Draconian doesn’t mean “not widely adopted”. It means “heavy-handed”.
The industry standard is draconian.
Argumentum ad populum.