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An Ethical Question Regarding Ebooks

tytso writes "Suppose there is a book that you want to read on your ebook reader, but it is out of print (so even if you purchase the dead-tree version of the book used, the author won't receive any royalties) and the publisher has refused to make it available as an ebook. You can buy it from Amazon as a used book, but that isn't your preferred medium. It is available on the internet as a pirated etext, however. This blog post outlines a few possibilities, and then asks, 'What is the right thing to do? And why?' I'm also curious if the answers change depending on whether you are a Baby Boomer, or a Gen X, Gen Y, etc. — I've noticed that attitudes around copyright seem to change depending on whether someone is a college student or a recent college graduate, versus someone who can remember a time when the Internet did not exist."

2 of 715 comments (clear)

  1. Best use of the Kindle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    What I do is after I buy a book, I use a little script I wrote to print it up and then I read the printed copy. Then I have a backup, and I can read it in the preferred medium. Ethical problem solved!!

    1. Re:Best use of the Kindle by monxrtr · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Heh. If only words didn't count as action. Suck it up FLEB (312391).

      --
      "From DNA to P2P, we are all Copycats now. Go Go Copycat Power! Copycat Powers activate! Form of, a Copycat." --monxrtr