ornornor 4 days ago

To be pedantic, Amazon sells you a license to read the book but you don’t actually own the book like you would a real book. They can remove the book anytime and there is nothing you can do about it. They’ve already done it in the past, the book just vanished.

3
GolfPopper 4 days ago

Yep. I don't mind paying authors and published for ebooks, but I draw the line at Amazon controlling my library. It seems like one solution might be to buy the ebook via whatever platform the author says is best for them, and then acquire a copy you control via other means.

amanaplanacanal 4 days ago

If you are really worried about this, you can pirate the book from the usual sites and side load it onto your kindle.

paxys 4 days ago

You can strip DRM in one click using Calibre. That way you can support the author and also own the book forever.

zzbn00 4 days ago

The terms of service in UK seem better in this regard than USA.

Which/why did they remove the book?

xethos 4 days ago

The famous example is the removal of George Orwell's 1984. Note that Bezos called it all kinds of things, but did not revert the change according to the article [0]

[0] https://www.npr.org/2009/07/24/106989048/amazons-1984-deleti...

ornornor 4 days ago

Here: https://gizmodo.com/amazon-secretly-removes-1984-from-the-ki...

The irony that it was Orwell’s 1984 that was secretly removed from purchasers’ kindles seem to have been totally lost on Amazon.

zzbn00 4 days ago

I didn't know about that, would have been right that Amazon pays damages to the copyright holder. But they did at least refund the price paid, so the readers were no worse off than at start.

Generally not a big fan of Amazon-world, but if you don't mind reading older books kindle is good value I think. My 30pence copy of Orwell's "Homage to Catalonia" was very good value, and has not yet mysteriously disappeared from my Kindles!