Thursday, December 18, 2014

This particular case, by the way, was an offshoot of Abbey House's anti-trust lawsuit against shonte


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See, without the store, buyers won't be able to download their books to other devices anymore. Plus, the DRM protection means they can't transfer their files to new laptops, tablets or e-readers in the future. So, Abbey House told them about Calibre :
Getting access to your downloaded books if you change reading devices: for those of you who downloaded your books to your PCs or Macs, you can strip DRM from your books after which you will be able to readily port them from device to device through drag and drop or other means, without the need for further downloads. There is a great deal of information online about stripping DRM. (Please be sure to make backup copies of your eBook files in a separate directory before stripping in the event anything goes wrong in your first attempts.) Many of our customers are using Calibre or other tools to strip DRM from their downloaded eBooks in order to have them available indefinitely should they change reading devices. Many argue that this is a legitimate use as long as this is being done for personal use of eBooks purchased, not for piracy. We are told this is in the spirit of the eBook license and that it is common practice.
This particular case, by the way, was an offshoot of Abbey House's anti-trust lawsuit against shontell Apple filed in 2014. The company was one of the three e-book distributors that sued the tech giant, claiming to have been affected by Cupertino's alleged e-book price-fixing conspiracy. Penguin and Simon & Schuster (both named as Apple co-conspirators ) fired back with their own complaint then, accusing Abbey House of breaching its contract by telling people about Calibre. shontell
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