Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
This drives me nuts!
Amen Brother! I don't like "real" books anymore, I want to read it on my Kindle damn it!
iPhone 5 with iBooks and the Kindle app FTW!![]()
NO!
I don't want a smart phone
I want my phone to make and receive calls and store phone numbers, that's it.
iPhone 5 with iBooks and the Kindle app FTW!![]()
NO!
I don't want a smart phone
I want my phone to make and receive calls and store phone numbers, that's it.
Why carry around a phone and a reader and this and that when I can carry one thing that fits in my shirt pocket instead?
Well... The Supreme Court says that Suk can buy it for you -- and even sell it to you without breaking the law or copyright rules.Because of some asinine licensing/copyright infringement bull **** I can't buy the book I want for my kindle because I live in the US.
This pisses me off.
I blame Sukerkin.![]()
from an article hereThe Supreme Court ruled last week in Kirtsaeng v. Wiley, a case that centered on the tension between copyright law’s first sale doctrine, codified at 17 U.S.C. §109(a), and the importation restriction found in 17 U.S.C. §602(a).
...
Last week, the Supreme Court overturned the Second Circuit’s ruling in Kirtsaeng, relying on the plain language of the statute, historical and contemporary statutory context, and practical considerations. The Court explained that a work “lawfully made under this title” refers to infringing versus non-infringing copies of a work -- that is, legitimate versus counterfeit copies -- and does not refer to a geographical limitation on the fair use defense. A significant portion of the Court’s majority opinion, which was written by Justice Breyer and joined by 5 other Justices, focused on the practical import of the decision. For instance, the Court cited the American Library Association’s amicus brief in the case, which argued that if the Court decided that the first sale doctrine did not apply to all works, regardless of geography, then public libraries would face the “insurmountable barrier” of having to obtain licenses for the 200 million foreign-published books in their collections, which would likely force them to close.
...
NO!
I don't want a smart phone
I want my phone to make and receive calls and store phone numbers, that's it.
Does it say how he can get it to my kindle?Well... The Supreme Court says that Suk can buy it for you -- and even sell it to you without breaking the law or copyright rules.
Is it not possible to just download the file to your PC and then pipe it across via the USB connection to the KIndle? Or is it the Kindle itself that is enforcing the copyright? Wouldn't surprise me given what Amazon are like.