Are your books safe?

A word from our sponsor:

The Breast Form Store Little Imperfections Big Rewards Sale Banner Ad (Save up to 50% off)

There have been repeated reports in the past of Amazon Kindle stealing money from consumers. As well as Kindle being a proprietary and closed standard for content delivery. The underlying issue is not only restricted to Amazon Kindle, but any and all cloud-based streaming content providers.

Who controls the content that is saved on the cloud? Is it the owner of the content? Or is it the owner of the infrastructure?

If I buy a book, I do so with the understanding that I will be able to read that book anywhere I want and at any time I want, as well as be able to cite the contents without fear of having it altered without notice at some unspecified time. When I buy a book, I can be certain that I will be able to take that book home with me.

It is absolutely unacceptable for a bookstore tell me that the book I bought and payed for has to stay in the bookstore, all bight in a bookcase with my name on it that supposedly nobody else can access. And every time I want to read or consult a book that I bought and own, I will have to come to the bookstore to do so. And to add insult to injury, the bookstore reserves the right to remove or replace any book in my bookcase without so much as notifying me in advance.

But that is exactly what Amazon Kindle has done in the past, and is hell-bent on doing again in the near future. Take a look at this recent video Amazon are changing the way you own your Kindle books - you have 10 days to react. Well actually there are now less than 10 days to react.

I apologize to Erin and Doppler Press, as well as all the contributors who have [self-]published on Kindle, in the hopes of realizing some monetary compensation from their literary hobby. But to me this seems to be on par with the often mentioned plagiarism by unscrupulous individuals, only at the corporate level.

Click Like or Love to appropriately show your appreciation for this post: