When is it legal to use cracked software?
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Amazon's been closing people's accounts, thus preventing them from accessing their purchased books, which amounts to the same thing. But as with software, you don't actually own Kindle books, you only purchase a licence to read a book, which can be revoked (I believe).
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It's true that Amazon can and has pulled a book back after it was sold.. but I recall the first case of that 4-5 years ago. The backlash was huge, and Amazon vowed not to do it again.
As for the closed accounts... do you have any details to provide?
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@Dashrender said:
As for the closed accounts... do you have any details to provide?
If memory serves, I'm basing my post on this article that I read in the paper a few years ago:
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2012/oct/22/amazon-wipes-customers-kindle-deletes-account -
Important to note that that was in Norway and would easily be illegal in the US or UK. Remote wiping of someone's device could constitute hacking in the US and potentially be a criminal, rather than civil, offense.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
Amazon's been closing people's accounts, thus preventing them from accessing their purchased books, which amounts to the same thing. But as with software, you don't actually own Kindle books, you only purchase a licence to read a book, which can be revoked (I believe).
Stopping access is sometimes allowed. DRM does that. But that doesn't mean that working around the DRM isn't allowed too.
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Andy Boxall of Digital Trends said: "Amazon in turn uses the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to take your books and privileges away if it finds you've been naughty."
According to Amazon's Kindle Store terms of use, "Kindle content is licensed, not sold". Should you attempt to break the DRM security block or transfer your purchase to another device, Amazon may legally "revoke your access to the Kindle Store and the Kindle Content without refund of any fees."Isn't the DMC US law? Seems to imply they can and will do this if they feel it's warranted.
The article even specifically mentions what I had recalled as being pulled, the George Orwell books that were inappropriately published. What they don't mention is that the money was refunded for those books. The bigger complaint came because those who wanted those books had to either pay a higher price for an appropriately published book, or the book simply wasn't available.
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@Dashrender said:
Andy Boxall of Digital Trends said: "Amazon in turn uses the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to take your books and privileges away if it finds you've been naughty."
According to Amazon's Kindle Store terms of use, "Kindle content is licensed, not sold". Should you attempt to break the DRM security block or transfer your purchase to another device, Amazon may legally "revoke your access to the Kindle Store and the Kindle Content without refund of any fees."Isn't the DMC US law? Seems to imply they can and will do this if they feel it's warranted.
The article even specifically mentions what I had recalled as being pulled, the George Orwell books that were inappropriately published. What they don't mention is that the money was refunded for those books. The bigger complaint came because those who wanted those books had to either pay a higher price for an appropriately published book, or the book simply wasn't available.
Yes, and it is not that clear. DMCA conflicts with other laws and is rarely a clear case. Most uses of the DMCA are illegal and essentially all are unethical.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@Dashrender said:
As for the closed accounts... do you have any details to provide?
If memory serves, I'm basing my post on this article that I read in the paper a few years ago:
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2012/oct/22/amazon-wipes-customers-kindle-deletes-accountPretty sure in court a customer would easily win that case, even if Amazon's terms of service allowed it.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
@Dashrender said:
As for the closed accounts... do you have any details to provide?
If memory serves, I'm basing my post on this article that I read in the paper a few years ago:
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2012/oct/22/amazon-wipes-customers-kindle-deletes-accountPretty sure in court a customer would easily win that case, even if Amazon's terms of service allowed it.
That's my belief. Using DRM to disable their content is likely legal. Wiping a device is likely not.
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For my own personal use, I will on occasion download a torrent of something as a trial version. If you like it, buy it.
In your situation, that's kinda murky - I'm not sure.
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Talk about timing..... European Union begins probing Amazon's Kindle division this morning for anti-trust violations.