The novella is ebook only.
Oh yeah. I just saw the word Vanguard and forgot about the new ebook.
The novella is ebook only.
Because you don't own the eBooks you buy (the publisher owns them, you're only licensing them), and the DMCA makes it illegal to circumvent digital rights management. In short, you have no legal right to the eBook on your computer or device; it doesn't belong to you.Legally, no. Though there's nothing stopping you from downloading a program that will convert the file to html or word or something and printing it from there.
How is this illegal? I want to buy the ebook and print it for my own personal use (not for sale or whatever)
It's not a gray area at all. By the letter of the law, it's illegal, and you strip the DRM at your own risk. Just because a court hasn't ruled on it doesn't mean that it's not illegal.Until we get a court ruling, it's a grey area. It's not known if it's illegal or not. So don't go making a blanket statement to the illegality of stripping DRM when it's not 100% illegal (in the USA) and might not be illegal at all.
It's not a gray area at all. By the letter of the law, it's illegal, and you strip the DRM at your own risk. Just because a court hasn't ruled on it doesn't mean that it's not illegal.Until we get a court ruling, it's a grey area. It's not known if it's illegal or not. So don't go making a blanket statement to the illegality of stripping DRM when it's not 100% illegal (in the USA) and might not be illegal at all.
And "Fair Use" doesn't apply unless you're stripping DRM so you can quote from it. Also, the Fair Use Doctrine in an affirmative defense; it's an admission that you're violating copyright, but you have a reason for doing so. And that's something that courts have to adjudicate.
Umm, no.Fair Use applies to stripping DRM for your own personal use. Not just quoting. It applies so you can format shift and other things one does for personal use.
Can you tell me how stripping DRM to format shift applies to any of that?17 U.S.C. § 107
Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 17 U.S.C. § 106 and 17 U.S.C. § 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include:
the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;
the nature of the copyrighted work;
the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.
Nobody has legally said that Fair Use is not no longer valid. So until this issue is sorted out, it's going to remain a grey area.
It's not a gray area at all. By the letter of the law, it's illegal, and you strip the DRM at your own risk.
Unless the ebook isn't available in a format that allows screen-reading. Or you live somewhere more enlightened than the US.
Plus 'at your own risk' an important phrase there, as there is no risk to individuals. No-one gets prosecuted for it. And when that happens, laws often get changed to allow that sort of thing, because no-one wants un-enforced laws on the statute books. It used to be illegal to rip your CDs to iTunes, but everyone did it, so eventually that got added to 'fair use'.
Here in germany ebooks and printed editions are not allowed to be priced differently.
Of course the paper editions can vary in price from the eBook edition(s), and do so for most books.
Of course the paper editions can vary in price from the eBook edition(s), and do so for most books.
I´m not sure...the text of the law actually says: "books in the sense of this law are...products that substitue or reproduce books, musical scores or cartographic products"
http://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/buchprg/BJNR344810002.html
See §2 3.
Because the first two stayed in print as mass-market books, or never got a print-on-demand reprint. The third did get a POD reprint. And since S&S ties their ebook prices to the price of the latest print edition, when that went up so did the ebook price.What bothers me most about Simon and Schuster is the inconsistencies in pricing. A perfect example is the book series I'm reading right now, "Worlds of Deep Space 9." The first book is about 7 dollars, the second is 8, but the 3rd book is 13 dollars!? Why?
Of course, now I bought it the old one has been found. So, now I have paid for 2 "real" books.
Would it be morally and/or legally wrong to download an e-book version without paying for it?
There's nothing "grey" here. It's either legal or illegal. Because courts have not ruled on whether DRM stripping is legal, it's presumptively illegal because of the DMCA. If you want to strip the DRM, there's nothing to stop you, but you do so at your own risk until such time as the courts say that it's not illegal to do so.
While definitely agree with that I still think there a difference (at least morally) if you bought a real book or not.Of course, now I bought it the old one has been found. So, now I have paid for 2 "real" books.
Would it be morally and/or legally wrong to download an e-book version without paying for it?
An eBook is a REAL book. It would be legally wrong to download the eBook. Morally is up to you.
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