Rich forwarded me this article on Boing Boing regarding “Kindle Books having download caps” on content. That just shattered my enthusiasm.
A kind word of caution to Amazon: If you allow embedded Digital Rights Management content into Kindle media, your product will die. You are selling to early technology adopters, and history has confirmed they don’t tolerate DRM. It’s an anti-buyer technology, and the implementation requires (wrong) assumptions be made as to how a user want to use the device. History has also demonstrated that if you do push DRM with the content, the scheme will be broken, and people will do it just because they can.
If you are worried about getting content, and feel you need DRM to appease content owners of major publishing houses, don’t. This is a very cool device, and content will come from thousands of sources, and people will find ways to use it you never thought possible.
Reader interactions
10 Replies to “Kindle and DRM Content”
Loner,
I’m having a really hard time with it, because we are planning on publishing the blog on the Kindle (for the fun of it), and I was thinking about getting one. It would be great for when I travel, although I probably won’t use it much at home. But I *hate* to support that kind of DRM.
Sigh.
In regards to DRM, it truly makes a difference in what I buy or use. Even controlling mechanisms like iTunes.
@reppep – It’s cool, but not ready to classify it as a successful product yet. If the rumored unit sales numbers are to be believed, the growth curve is very similar to Toshiba’s HD-DVD player sales numbers in the first two years.
Worse than the DRM, Amazon has a root shell on your kindle. They’re really not sure if they’re selling them or renting them to you.
@Roland –
Thanks for the comment. Regrettably I have intermingled the two topics being discussed … the general use of DRM and the content download cap … by including a link to the later when I was addressing the former. Most of the articles, posts and other references I have seen make this same sleight of hand, intentional or otherwise, by complaining about a download cap when they are seeing a limit on the number of devices in use. I believe this is what you are pointing out.
That said, if you have additional information to share, or sources you believe to be more accurate, please share. I’ll approve the links just in case our spam filter blocks them.
Thanks again,
Adrian
As has already been discussed in great detail elsewhere, the ‘download limit’ allegation regarding Kindle content is 100% bogus. One can download an infinite number of times; the only restriction is that a single purchased copy of a Kindle-DRMed work can be loaded simultaneously on a maximum of 6 devices tied to the same account.
It might be a good idea to do a bit more due diligence prior to repeating and expanding upon this sort of topic; just because we read something on the Internet doesn’t make it true, heh.
;>
I agree on the download limit being a big problem. Audible has a similar issue with activations, but my main concern is some day lossing all access to products I paid full retail price for.
Any DRM created is quickly broken anyway. The DRM at audible is easily bypassed when converting to mp3 but it is a time consuming process. I am sure Kindle content DRM was broken days if not hours of launch.
I think it’s the download limit more than the DRM itself that bothers me. I’ve been thinking of getting a Kindle, and we are probably going to sign up to support the blog on it, but I no have serious doubts about buying one for myself. I want to share books with my wife, or be able to transfer them to whatever device I have handy. I don’t want to lose my books just because I upgraded my device.
I may still consider getting one for “throwaway” books I don’t care about (fluff I read when traveling). But I’d never consider anything that didn’t give me a safe, perpetual license a serious option.
Except that Kindle is already a successful product, and all Kindle ebooks have been sold with this DRM. Few (zero?) customers knew about the 1-2 download limit on some books to date, though.
DRM is really a deal breaker for me in a lot of products. I have a lot of Audible audio books, but I cannot say I am a happy customer. As a legitimate customer, I am frequently inconvenienced by their DRM and had to contact support a few times to reset my activations. In this day and age, I am forced to format and reinstall my computer just about every 6 months because of upgrades or performance. I am also paranoid my collection of audio books (probably about $1,500-$2,000 worth of books) will someday disappear because of user error, company failure, or just because.
One of my favorite products Mindjet Mind Manager has gone the way of activations, and I already ran into an issue where I had to have it reset. I should never have upgraded to version 8 and just stuck with version 7.
What really does it for me, studies in music and even video games have shown DRM rarely gets more than 10% of the pirates to purchase. Most pirates wouldn’t buy it in the first place. Yet I am sure in many cases DRM / copy protection costs more than the money saved. On the other hand, there have been instances when the lack of copy protection created a legion of pirates. Brad Wardell from Stardock can attest to this with the launch of DemiGod.
I am 100% supportive of any copy protection that does not inconvenience a paying customer’s right to fair use.