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But no, apparently the publisher changed its mind about offering an electronic edition, and apparently Amazon, whose business lives and dies by publisher happiness, caved. It electronically deleted all books by this author from people’s Kindles and credited their accounts for the price.
When Big Brother struck what books did they take? 1984 and Animal Farm. It seems some purchases are more equal than others.
Big Brother? I object to the inflammatory characterization of writers and their works or the inflammatory characterization of any artist trying to control their works.
George Orwell is dead. How is he involved in this in any fashion. In fact he's been dead over 50 years. If they hadn't changed the copy right and trademark rules, or used the ones at his death, at this point I think his works may even have been public domaine (if they aren't that is).
I think it's pretty odd, if they had made a mistake at a normal booksellers and released a book early or when they weren't supposed to, they wouldn't have snuck into someone's house and stolen it back, even if they leave a check that's normally called...STEALING.
That is, if I go and take your car, even if I leave a check for how much I think it is worth to you (let's say I leave you a check for 5000...) it's still considered stealing.
Of course I suppose it isn't the same thing if it's as people stated, with the kindle you are just paying for access into the system, and not to actually own anything, in which case I would suppose it's more like paying to be part of a carpool in the morning and they just decide not to pick you up anymore or something like that.
Still, not the nicest thing, and could be considered questionable as you are stuck there trying to figure out how to get to work after you realize what they've done.
On a separate note...isn't DRM what Microsoft have and what many of the Movie makers want on Windows to check for pirated stuff...and Kindle is relying on something slightly different in their case?