Adobe's New Ebook DRM Will Leave Existing Users Out In the Cold Come July
Nate the greatest writes "Whether it's EA and SimCity, the Sony rootkit scandal, or Ubisoft, we've all read numerous stories about companies using DRM in stupid ways that harm their customers, and now we can add Adobe to the list. Adobe has just announced a new timeline for adoption of their recently launched 'hardened' DRM, and it's going to take your breath away. In a video posted to Youtube, Adobe reps have stated that Adobe expects all of their ebook partners to start adopting the new DRM in March. This is the same DRM that was launched only a few weeks ago and is already causing problems, but that hasn't stopped Adobe. They also expect all the stores that use Adobe's DRM to sell ebooks (as well as the ebook app and ebook reader developers) to have fully adopted the new ebook DRM by July 2014. That's when Adobe plans to end support for the old DRM (which everyone is using now). Given the dozens and dozens of different ebook readers released over the past few years, including models from companies that have gone under, this is going to present a significant problem for a lot of readers. Few, if any, will be updated in time to meet Adobe's deadline, and that's going to leave many readers unable to buy DRMed ebooks."
DRMed content deserves to die, as collateral damage of killing the DRM. If people stop buying it, eventually it goes away.
Or put another way, this is going to leave lots and lots of people unable to buy any DRM'd books.
I fail to see this as a bad thing.
DRM means you're giving someone else the ability to manage your digital rights.
Captcha - Vassal (I swear this thing is psychic)
There couldn't be a clearer example of why DRM on books is a bad f***ing idea.
Hate him or love him: Richard Stallman was right! Read it and weep: https://www.gnu.org/philosophy...
The whole thing was written in 1997, for pete sake - when ebooks where still pretty much prototypes.
The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
I don't buy DRMed shit. I do buy titles from Baen Books and Tor, but they aren't infested with digital restrictions management. If I want a title, and I can't find it from a publisher that doesn't use DRM, I just pop over to my favorite torrent website. And normally I'll find what I'm looking for. (If I don't, I'll find it at my second favorite torrent site, easy.)
I.e. DRM doesn't work. Moreover, it has the opposite effect, rather than preventing copying, it encourages more copying!
(I might buy DRM infested titles, if Adobe made their software work on */Linux. But probably not. But considering I don't run anything else, there is no point in my forking over money for something I can't read or use.)
Oh, and ignoring all the above: why should I have to update the firmware or software on my ebook reader? It's an appliance. I don't expect to update the firmware on my TV, microwave or rice cooker. Why should I? It works now.
HELP MY ACCOUNT HAS BEEN HACKED BY AN ILLIBERAL ART STUDENT SET TO DESTROY THE INTERWEBZ!
long live the printed word!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
...just sayin'...
Meanwhile, customers get alienated, pissed off, pissed on, anally probed, and money taken from them. Those that get tired of it will add to the masses that go to pirate.
Models like Netflix, Steam, and iTunes show that light or zero DRM can work, and it allows customers easy access to products they want. You make it painful, difficult and costly, potential customers turn to other avenues. That may be forgoing that entertainment and going elsewhere, it may be pirating. The HBO/Game of Thrones model is a good example.
I have money in my wallet. I am willing to spend it, if the price is fair, and I do not have to get butthurt for it. Provide me that opportunity and you have my money. Do not, and you will not. There will always be a portion who steal or pirate, either because they are broke, or because they can. No amount of DRM will stop that. Instead you make yourself a target for those who politically do not like your methods, break your protection/racketeering schemes then provide it to everyone.
However here on /. I am largely preaching to the choir, so while my rant here may do little, remember this slash kiddies. Vote with your wallet, do your best NOT to support companies that do these things. Explain it to your family and peers. Even if they disagree, maybe you sparked a seed of thought that was not there before.
Silence is a state of mime.
I'm having a hard time following the train of though behind such moves. What do they expect the people will do once they are not able to buy ebooks and read them on their device. Worse, what do they expect people will do once they actually buy ebooks and then notice they can't read them on their device due to DRM?
It almost feels like dark scheme to push people towards piracy and undermine the profit of the compagnies. It somewhat reminded me of how Garmin handles its customer with its mapping product. I had a map installed on a handeld device and on old car device. After I bought a brand new device from that exact same company, I couldn't install the map on that new device as it was already installed on two device, one being the old car GPS replaced by the new one. The officiel support answer was "sorry, we can't help you. You can buy a new copy of the map _here_". With such a policy, they lost a good customer that was happy up to that point. I expect the ebook users to experience about the same kind of feeling being put in the situation that lays before them.
Adobe can choke and die on its DRM if it wants. I hope the ebook community can find an open alternative.
Wait until we are required by law to buy DRMed shit. Through one of those super-secret international treaties where only lobbyists have acces to (cf. TRIPS, Transatlantic, Transpacific etc.)
Rats. Scum.
foot ... aim ... fire!
Product "upgrades" always sound compelling to software "product managers" but are always less-so to customers. The managers do not suffer the upgrade costs (which are always far greater than relicence costs, especially when backwards compatibility is not advertised).
Any upgrade is always marginal -- the initial app solved the problem and captured most of the benefits. An upgrade hunts for scraps. Many upgrades are forced by obsolescence -- if customers could keep the old system running, they would.
Sure, with new systems you want the "latest" to have decent lifetime. And with really compelling uses (mobile), new systems will be bought.
I do not see anything remotely compelling about the new Adobe DRM, Amazon will eat their lunch even faster.
So, we all know how well this worked out for Dmitry Sklyarov last time. Learning how DRM is a self-defeating technology is kinda like the cycles in the fashion industry: everything old is new again. The stakes just get higher and higher with all the maximalist lobbying that goes on between each cycle.
[
How much of a market share does Adobe DRM have in the eBook world? I didn't get a clear picture from any of TFA's (yep I read them) as to how prevalent this DRM is.
But yeah, if I had an affected system I would be pissed, and rightly so.
I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
For all your non-DRM, out of copyright (mostly, some creative commons material as well) ebook needs: http://www.gutenberg.org/
Also check out the proof reading project where material for Project Gutenberg is produced, http://www.pgdp.net/
They also expect all the stores that use Adobe's DRM to sell ebooks (as well as the ebook app and ebook reader developers) to have fully adopted the new ebook DRM by July 2014.
Those stores ain't selling any ebooks. They're renting you a license to read the book. A license they can revoke at any time... And now we know when that time will be.
DRM cannot work (Except in the USA) the logic is, here is a locked box, and here is the key, please only use the key how we say ... (in the USA it can be illegal to use the key except how specified! )
The fashion industry is an perfect example of why copyright is not needed... there is no copyright on clothing design, yet the fashion industry still exists and makes lots of money ... but is forced to continually come up with new ideas, which because there is no copyright quickly propagate around the entire industry
Puteulanus fenestra mortis
If their proposal for ebooks are DRM'd PDFs, i feel ok that they put a stronger DRM on it. It's simply the wrong approach, so making it even more evidently wrong will give reasonable alternatives (even a .txt is easier to read in all kind of devices than a .pdf that for viewing comfortably must have the same physical dimensions as the original paper book) more visibility.
You have certain rights to rental.
And it's cheaper than "buy to [not really] own".
Unless this effects the Kindle or Nook, how many books could this even be? I wasn't even aware that Adobe HAD an ebook format. Realistically, how many books does this expiring DRM even effect, a few thousand, maybe?
The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
Maybe because I insist on remaining anonymous but I've never heard of Adobe selling ebooks. Does Amazon know about this?
Hey, is that you Jeff Bezos?
Steam's DRM is entirely intrusive.
If you have two games and two computers, you cannot use one whist someone else uses the other if they're Steam titles.
If they were DRM'd with SecureRom or whatever, you would.
I've never bought a DRM'd book and never intend to.
I have an idea, what if we printed books on paper...
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
Yep.
"...we can add Adobe to the list."
Ridiculous statement—Adobe was a charter member.
Now this is a fucking interesting idea :-)
Did you read the summary? At all? Adobe is the company that came up with PDF. The article is about how they're changing PDF DRM and expect ebooks that use Adobe's DRM to comply with the new one. Many iPad and Android books are affected, as well as (possibly) B&N ebooks, which uses a variant of it. Kindle books should not be affected. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A...
1) Acquire ebook reader
2) Acquire book
3) Strip DRM from book
4) Read book
5) Re-read whenever you want to, on any device you want to, because it's no longer a crippled piece of media
6) ???
7) Profit!
Heck, I've even taught my parents how to strip DRM from the books they buy! If they can figure it out, anyone should be able to.
That's assuming you buy crippled books. There are alternative options available.
Would someone knowledgeable about this—someone who can refrain from jumping on one finger-wagging bandwagon or another long enough to compose a sober paragraph—please jump in and sort out whether this is primarily a problem of older hardware not being able to handle newer publications, or of newer hardware becoming unable/unwilling to render older content?
These are totally different things.
This circus of layered tread marks is not shedding much light.
I think you mean it's ALSO a Linux app.
Unless this effects the Kindle or Nook, how many books could this even be? I wasn't even aware that Adobe HAD an ebook format. Realistically, how many books does this expiring DRM even effect, a few thousand, maybe?
Adobe's ebook DRM is used by OverDrive http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OverDrive,_Inc. to let more than 27,000 public libraries and schools lend ebooks to citizens and students. They make than 1.8 million different ebooks from over 1000 publishers available to libraries and schools using this scheme.
Adobe's termination of the existing DRM mechanism means that those thousands of schools and libraries will have to buy new ereader hardware and the students and citizens who borrow ebooks from them will have to buy new ereader hardware. So Adobe's termination of the existing DRM mechanism is going to cost American tax payers hundreds of thousands of dollars (if not millions).
/sarcasm/ Good job Adobe. You really know how to encourage people to use your licenses legally. /sarcasm/
...that's going to leave many readers unable to buy DRMed ebooks.
Oh no, it won't. They'll be able to buy all the DRMed books they want, just with the new DRM. And they'll have to, because they won't be able to use the old ones they purchased from a company that no longer exists. Do you think this isn't what they had in mind? You insisted on buying a copy instead of a license to use the content for a set time, so the publishers have found a way to make you pay again...
How come Slashdot never gets Slashdotted?
What Adobe was doing was ILLEGAL in Russia.
What Dimitry did was legally right in Russia.
Hell, it was legally allowed (interoperability clause) in the USA.
But Adobe has more clout in the US government than a Russian citizen.
Of course, if Adobe had been done for their crime in Russia, the US gov would then declare trade war on Russia, because heaven forfend that a US corporation obey laws.
It is unlawful copy, print, lend or give an E-book. And don'e even think of read ing Alice in Wonderland aloud.
This is one of those things which absolutely only works to inhibit the honest user only. Let's say, for the sake of argument, that a person wants to copy a DRM'ed book. And, let's say that this DRM is completely unbreakable (no such thing, but humor me). They simply hook a video camera up to a computer with an OCR program and can copy the book as fast as they can physically swipe on the e-reader screen. A pirated ebook can then be made available at all the usual suspect sites. Adding more DRM to something is crappy management's answer to declining sales, not looking at their price points (really, why does an e-book which requires no physical production, shipping, and storage cost almost as much as a hardcopy?), or the change in consumer preference for different media, or general lifestyle, or maybe that people prefer hardcopy in lieu of looking at yet another screen.
It's not just PDF, nor even primarily PDF. It's reflowable standard EPUB. EPUB with Adobe DRM is the standard commercial ebook format for the "rest of the world that isn't Amazon". Barnes & Noble Nook (now mostly Microsoft Nook). Kobo, which is number 2 in much of the world. Google Play Books. eReaders from Kobo, B&N, iRiver, white-box Chinese brands affordable in emerging markets, even iBooks own Appleized format, have Adobe DRM inside. eReading apps from third parties like the well-respected Aldiko Reader and Bluefire reader use Adobe DRM. Only Kindle doesn't use it.
I've got Google Play Books and Kobo books on my Nook Color early-gen ereading tablet, because of Adobe DRM being near-universal. Have Google Play books on my Kobo WiFi e-ink eReader and on my newer Kobo AuraHD e-ink eReader. On my Android phone, whitebox cheap 10" tablet, and Kobo Arc (Android tablet with Kobo's shell but full open Google Play Store Jellybean tablet), I have the Aldiko app so that I can combine my Kobo and my Google Play books into a single library rather than reading in separate apps per bookstore. (Nooks can sideload and read standard EPUB/AdobeDRM but Nook books can't be read outside of Nook hardware or apps due to B&N weird variant AdobeDRM).
Adobe is breaking all this relatively open ecosystem. Sure, it's DRM, but it's an "anything except Kindle" open system. Adobe is screwing over all the people who bought into the non-Kindle commercial ebook ecosystem over the past half-decade or so.
I'm writing from the perspective of a normal human, not a /. geek. Normals don't break DRM because they don't know how, they don't even know it's a thing. They don't buy only non-DRM books, because they want to buy books from their favorite authors, not obscure corners of the web. Even many self-published books, if distributed through "normal channels" carry Adobe DRM (or Amazon DRM). They might, if they read the very simple info on the Kobo, Google Play, and other ecosystem-member web pages, have realized they can buy a book from Google and read it on their Sony eReader, buy a book from Kobo on sale and read it on their original Nook or Nook front-light newer e-ink reader. They may be all over Goodreads and ereader websites where there are lots of how-tos about just that, but they are nowhere near Slashdot. Nor near Linux. And O'Reilly tech books are irrelevant. As are, to most readers, Baen and Tor SF.
Hell, I don't want to deal with this myself, and I know how or can easily figure it out. Just going to the "Download Adobe DRM" link at Kobo or Google Play, getting the .ACSM (Adobe Content Server Mechanism) license file, double-clicking on the download and having previously-installed Adobe Digital Editions get the DRM-unlocked-to-my-ID content was simple. Bang, read it on my PC in Adobe Digital Editions, or tether my Android phone/tablet to drag into Aldiko or Bluefire, tether my Kobo eReaders (e-ink actual ereaders for readers) and drag it into their libraries, tether the Nook Color and drag it into its library.
Now I'd' have to go break DRM on all those files and future purchases. But that would be wrong...
My company puts out gaming materials (as in tabletop, pnp). When we initially looked at putting out an ebook format ten years ago, we did look at DRM as a form of content control. At the time, though, the requirements to implement such a platform were...to be frank, ridiculous.
So we decided to invest a little bit of trust in our community. We KNOW e-pub versions of our rulebooks and the like are shared amongst gaming groups. It's a given.
But we've had great interaction with our player communities over the years, and they understand that if we're seeing everything popping up on BitTorrent, we have less incentive to put up new material in a timely manner.
Now, we've had to issue a few takedown requests over the years. But only a few, and most of the stuff came down with nary a whimper. As such, we have pretty much ZERO impetus to move from standardized PDF distribution to DRM'ed versions. It's still a waste of time, effort and money. And it also would do damage to our relationship with our players.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
> that's going to leave many readers unable to buy DRMed ebooks.
That's a funny statement of the author, since many user will in fact buy ebooks just to find out their hardware won't support them anymore. But that's nothing which matters to adobe or any publisher as long as you won't try to use "your" property (which it apparently isn't), in which they start yelling at you "PIRATE - PUT HIM INTO JAIL".
I'm seeing quite a few comments about how this is really a good thing because will make customers angry about DRM, but I'm not sure. It seems to me that no-one in any of the following groups will be visibly affected:
-Anyone who buys e-books from Amazon - they don't use Adobe
-Anyone who uses buys books for a Nook, iDevice, Kobo, etc. using the official bookstores - they'll make sure they're in compliance because they have no choice
-Anyone with an objection to DRM - they're presumably only buying DRM free books anyway
-Pirates - they're pirates, so of course this isn't going to affect them
Is there a meaningful number of ebook consumers that don't fall into one of those categories? It seems to me like there's very little pushback against DRM in ebooks, because in practice it just doesn't affect enough customers. That's a different situation than we had 10-15 years ago, when DRM in music really did (temporarily) inconvenience a large segment of the buying public.
The only one I've looked into is the Nook, but it seems to me like it is fundamentally flawed. It has a lot of bits so it can't be brute forced. But, they use a pass phrase to generate the key. The phrase is your name and credit card number, so it's not as many bits. But if I get a hold of your Nook I can get your name from one of your screens. And the last four digits of your credit card. The first 6 digits of your card are not secret either and are determined by your bank and card company. If you don't know it at least many can be eliminated. So the only really secret part is the middle section of 6 numeric digits. I'm not sure how long it would take to brute force but it doesn't seem like it would be too long and it's easily parallelizable. So if you leave your Nook somewhere not only could I copy your books, I can have your credit card and name as well.
Once I have it, it's fucking MINE. It shouldn't be any different for e-books, either, but for some reason is.
We need perfect demonstrations of why DRM should be illegal in its current form. This is pretty close to perfect.
What it demonstrates is that DRM can be used to cut off access directly OR indirectly from users to content they have purchased.
Unless we're going to have legal protections requiring support for ALL existing DRM formats in perpetuity, so they can be accessed into the future, and backed by government bonds to ensure the DRM can be 'resolved' if the company goes under, then this shit isn't going to work.
This will be great for us, the people. Adobe is on a one way path to demonstrating the dangers of software as a service, DRM and proprietary formats.
I'm typically one who has no problem with proprietary formats or DRM, slippery slope that they can be ... and Adobe has slid off the deep end.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
That's the part that's always bugged me. The big cost in publishing is the printing, shipping, warehousing, distribution of the dead trees [...]
Is it? I thought it was paying the author, the proofreader, the (copy) editor, the typesetter, etc. AFAICT, the physical aspects of publishing have been a negligble cost for a while now.
Anyone got actual numbers on this type of thing? Anyone in the industry that could give some perspective?
it's not worth reading.
Buy dead tree until these companies realize no one wants to pay big bucks for indian-giving schemes. There've already been cases where purchases have been revoked due to publishing squabbles and other rubbish. Whether it was accidental or not, the point is, they shouldn't be able to yank anything after it's been sold.
If publishers want DRM on their products, I want the same DRM on my money.
The point of DRM is not to limit copying of material by those in the know. It is meant, and the sole purpose of it is to limit how long the content is good for. That basically after a few years your device is now obsolete, the DRM used is no longer supported. If you want new content you need to buy a new device ... if you want your current content well, you need to buy it again for the new device. There are still a significant number of people in their 40s and up that will buy into this model.
We will spend our R&D budget on technology that will make it harder for our paying customers to use their paid for products.... ensuring they will remain paying customers!
Adobe wants to hook you, lock you in, and keep you forever. They don't want you just buying their software, they want your credit card permanently and irrevocably hooked up to their (leaky) computer system.
The HELL with them.
we've all read numerous stories about companies using DRM in stupid ways that harm their customers, and now we can add Adobe to the list
Only now? Adobe was using DRM to harm Dmitry Sklyarov over a decade ago. And in harming one of us, they harmed all of us.
Secession is the right of all sentient beings.
And O'Reilly tech books are irrelevant. As are, to most readers, Baen and Tor SF.
Blasphemy!
Adobe is one of the dumbest companies, their DRM is easily cracked across the board and this new one will also be cracked within moments of it appearing in the wild.
They need to give up, they also need to fix PDF so that it's not a fat bloated pig it has become. go back to what PDF was 10 years ago when it was not full of crap.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Apple does not use this.
By breaking your access to your books, Adobe is offering you a choice:
1.) Buy new hardware and get up to the new standard. This cost $$$.
2.) Figure out how to get your hardware compatible. This takes expertise and time.
3.) Pirate. This takes minimal expertise and time.
Depending on your financial situation, either option 1 or option 3 will make the most sense to you. Option 2 really only makes sens if you already have all the expertise and you have some legitimate concern about lawsuits.
Adobe is going to deeply regret this one.
That's OK. This will in no way impact my acquiring of said books.
I don't see what the problem is.
As far as I can tell, most of the ebook vendors who use DRM use Adobe's DRM. The exceptions are Kindle, Kobo, and (maybe) Nook. Even then, a lot of people who buy from Kobo use Adobe's DRM on third-party readers.
Now for users of computers and tablets, this isn't a huge issue. Just upgrade your software. Users of ereaders though will depend upon upgrades that may never be forthcoming. This will force at least some people to take a second look at why they're using ereaders and perhaps why they are even reading ebooks. After all, a lot of the momentum behind ebooks for your typical reader is going to be the ease of use. Well now it ain't going to be so easy.
I don't understand how you can refer to Netflix in the same breath as "light or zero DRM." Has anyone yet made a second Netflix client? Maybe I'm not as plugged into the underground as I used to, because I haven't heard anyone say they have managed to play Netflix streams yet. If I'm wrong, then it's time to bring on the XBMC and MythTV plugins.
I found one hack that tries to bring Netflix into the fold, but that actually uses Netflix's own software (running within Chrome!).
As far as I can tell, Netflix still uses extremely heavy DRM, so heavy that currently, only 31337 d00ds crack it (probably to pirate) (and I bet they don't even do that, and are instead capping the output), and regular uses still can't use their own clients.
If anyone other than Netflix ever implements Netflix's protocol (and it gets disclosed in public), you're going to hear words like "lawyers" and "ton of bricks" used repeatedly. There's nothing even slightly "light or none" about Netflix DRM, or how DMCA would apply to it.
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
If you purchase an e-book with DRM, you really are not purchasing it. You are only renting it, and the publisher, or e-book reader software/hardware vendor can remove it from your use at any time. I refuse to purchase any such thing. I'd rather go to the local library and borrow it...
Adobe's ebook DRM is used by OverDrive http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OverDrive,_Inc. to let more than 27,000 public libraries and schools lend ebooks to citizens and students.
THANK YOU! This makes the motives clear. The attempt is not to kill the ebook industry, just the ebook LENDING that libraries and schools allow.
McFly777
- - -
"What do people mean when they say the computer went down on them?" -Marilyn Pittman
All of that is true, and most here on /. (including myself) also knew Amazon refunded/replaced the user's purchase.
However, either you are incapable of getting the point here(i suspect this by the use of 'stolen goods' describing digital files), and so different from myself, that we will never find common grounds for a meaningful discussion. Or you are deliberately being obtuse.
If it clarifies my view on this subject (DRM), I mostly agree with Richard Stallman about this subject, and see your type as part of the problem here.
Good day to you, Enry, I'm done with you.
Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
That's just confirming that I'm on the right path, when I buy an ebook, the first thing I do is to strip-out the DRM and then save this copy in my backed-up storage. If I paid for it, I want to make sure I own it, period.
Someone who didn't have the authority to do so uploaded the book to Amazon for publishing.
If I walk into a Brick 'n' Mortar store, or get the paper book from Amazon, they can take my copy from my cold dead hands when they can get past my claymore mine buried under the front porch and tri-barrel shotgun.
I don't care if someone didn't "have the authority". I paid for it = it is mine = foad if you want it back.
This is why I only buy non-DRM books from reputable sellers like O'Reilly and Pragmatic Bookshelf. They offer all of the regular (pdf, epub, etc) formats and I don't have to worry about stuff getting stuck on an obsolete device when it comes time to get a new one.
This won't deter the pirates at all. They'll screen grab or print and OCR or whatever, the quality isn't particularly important to them, and people who use pirates anyway will continue to do so - they aren't "real" lost sales. All it will do is screw over the customer who's stuck with a load of old DRMed files he can no longer access or cannot buy the new ones because his reader doesn't support them. So he will be more likely to pirate or, you know, use an old-fashioned library. All of which harms only the authors, the publishers and Adobe.
/s Most pirates have never even heard of DRM s\ because it's the first thing that's stripped and they may think they're smarter, but just remember Photoshop CC was cracked in under 12 hours.
that's going to leave many readers unable to buy DRMed ebooks
Like that's a bad thing? Thank you Adobe for accelerating the move away from DRM!
The number of craps this guy gives about your stupid "viral" statement is totally unreal, and will result in a case of extreme internal hemorrhaging.
Oh, that didn't work on you either, OP? Because I'm pretty sure my breathing pattern didn't even change. Stop using worthless hyperbole, and get off the internet.
...and watch another foot cannon at work.
"Few, if any, will be updated in time to meet Adobe's deadline, and that's going to leave many readers unable to buy DRMed ebooks."
...for the five point seven minutes that it will take for the new "hardened" DRM to be broken and removal tools to be distributed through all of the usual channels.
Content Restrictions Access Protocols (CRAP)
Digital Rights Management manages digital rights in much the same way that Federal Prison manages freedom.
"The more you tighten your grip, Tarkin, the more star systems will slip through your fingers."
"It's a trap!"
(posting anonymously as I have modded other posts)
3.) Pirate. This takes minimal expertise and time.
Is it considered piracy when you break the DRM on books you have purchased? Because that's what the xenoc_1 said has to be done on his previously purchased books and will done on future purchases. And that's exactly what I'll be doing as well.
yay!
---- Booth was a patriot ----
readers unable to buy DRMed ebooks
Sounds good. Adobe seems to be finally doing its part to kill DRM. I look forward to all the chumps who bought DRMed books no longer being able to read the library they purchased when their current reader dies.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
so I'm deleting them from you.
So much for living free
This is why I purchase/download all my books in the epub format, which I can then upload to google play books for viewing on whatever mobile device/computer i happen to be using, WHILE retaining the un-DRM'd original file as a back up for when/if google dies...
Thinking of signing up for the @adobe Creative Cloud? Some of these horror stories might change your mind. http://forums.adobe.com/community/creative_cloud
Remember to change your passwords and check your bank account for the next several month to make sure the hackers that got all that sensitive data from Adobe don’t access your accounts.
Heck, even following their rules results in abandoned purchases. Early-adopter the user end of Adobe Digital Editions. Freak show. Bloated install? Check. Mobo swap? DRM dies. HD upgrade? DRM dies. Resolving this? Days of back and forth proving who I was, explaining why I needed a larger hard drive... Tried it again this past year, thinking sure a large company like Adobe had learned their lesson from tolerable eBook implementations (Kindle, iBooks...) Nope. $100 worth of purchased books are still dead.
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
After nearly 300 comments here, has anybody noticed that Adobe has backed off on this decision ?
You're slightly incorrect about who is using Adobe DRM.
Apple iBooks definitely does NOT use it; they use a version of FairPlay which is related to what the iTunes store used to use for music. Current versions of FairPlay for iBooks have not been cracked.
Kobo *can* sell you Adobe DRM books, and Kobo readers *can* read Adobe DRM books. But when you buy a book from the Kobo store from a Kobo device or app, you get a book with Kobo's DRM on it instead. I don't think Kobo's DRM scheme's been cracked.
However, Adobe DRM does infest a large portion of the ebook marketplace.
would end my dislike of adobe
I say if you pay for the DRM-locked e-book, movie or music CD, you should hack it, just out of principle. I don't believe in uploading this content to pirate websites, or in fact, sharing with anyone else. I just get great personal satisfaction out of cracking DRM. I don't tell friends, family or others about this talent, because I am not going to offer my services to anyone else.