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IT's a good question. Yes. On buying a download you are presented with a file to download to your hard drive. It's yours to keep, copy, share and so on.
With a Kindle bought book there's no easy way to access the book 'file'. In this respect it's very different from music downloads.
Share? Anybody care to comment? I thought that was definitely against the law since it deprives the copyright holder of a sale, but I'm prepared to be corrected.
I'm a late convert to downloading but now that lossless downloads are more widely available I'm hooked. I use eclassical and qobuz and was pleased to discover, having mislaid a file when moving them between drives, that it was easily available again at no additional cost.
btw, nt, I have received a new kindle as a gift, and find that all my previously purchased books are still available in the aether. Try again.
It probably is 'against the law' but there's nothing to stop you copying the files onto a USB stick and giving it to a friend. That's the nature of DRM free.
I've never done it myself but the opportunity is there for the criminally minded.
Is the law the same across all EU countries? It sounds as suspect as buying a CD, copying it to one's computer and then giving away the original, which I understood was illegal.
Is the law the same across all EU countries? It sounds as suspect as buying a CD, copying it to one's computer and then giving away the original, which I understood was illegal.
Is there a difference between "giving away the original" and attempting to sell it on? I have bought CDs from Amazon to give as presents to others, and they (Amazon) have put the "FreeRIP" download onto my computer (sometimes when I haven't wanted it!) - does the FreeRIP become illegal once I've parted with the physical CD, and should I delete them from my computer? If not, in what way is this different from buying a CD as a gift for somebody else, and burning it onto my computer before parting with it? (Something I've never done, by the way!) And it's never been illegal to lend a recording to someone (?has it? ) - so can someone not lend someone a USB file copy?
(In other words, is it only "criminally-minded" if I attempt to profit financially from such activities?)
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
<<Is there a difference between "giving away the original" and attempting to sell it on?>>
The difference, as I see it, is simply whether or not one keeps a copy having parted with the original. Selling or giving becomes irrelevant. "Lending" is not something easily quantified - how long is the loan?
Does one have to know the recipient? Are all those people offering free downloads of recent material merely "giving" a copy?
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