Companies should be required by law to completely open devices when they end support for them
If they don’t, the penalty should be that the CEO has to eat the bricked devices
Companies should be required by law to completely open devices when they end support for them
If they don’t, the penalty should be that the CEO has to eat the bricked devices
@Eatsbluecrayon @annecavicchi @dnparadice @thomasfuchs
Kobo does allow that IF (and only if) the publisher decides to make the book available without DRM. It's not Kobo who has chosen DRM, but they have supplied the means I suppose.
Source of knowledge: One of my wife's books that got indie published is available on Kobo without DRM - you buy it and download it, you get an ePub.
@Eatsbluecrayon if you follow the online recipes for removing DRM with Calibre, you can get around the Adobe process pretty well. I think they even have a method with a dummy Adobe ID and you can avoid any Adobe software usage all together.
I make good use of my Kobo devices with Calibre software and the @gutenberg_org titles when I'm not using it with library-sourced epubs.
@ottaross
Maybe you do, but in several jurisdictions that's illegal, and I don't publicly post about personally doing illegal things.
I mean, I use my new XTEINK X4 to read the many epubs that live on my Calibre-Web server. How they arrived there is my business, but I survive by people buying creative output, so they're paid for!
@Eatsbluecrayon is specifically looking for a method that involves no extra steps though, so lobbying publishers to remove DRM is the only legitimate way forward.