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image Canadian journalists are joining TeleRead community members and other e-book-lovers in complaining about Amazon’s sparse offerings up North—at least when it comes to best-sellers.

 Jesse Michaels, finance and tech editor for Canoe.ca, writes: “Sure, Amazon says Canada (and most other countries) has access to a library of 300,000+ eBooks, but there are many big titles we can’t buy because of copyright restrictions.

“Take ‘Pirate Latitudes,’ the posthumous novel from Michael Crichton. The eBook is readily available in the U.S. but Canadian Kindle users are out of luck. Want to read Stephen King’s latest? The same restrictions apply.

“I’ve had the Kindle for about a week now and am growing increasingly frustrated by the inability to buy these and other eBooks. Chances are I was going to purchase them in print anyway, so why can’t I buy the electronic versions in Canada?”

Meanwhile Peter Worthington, a columnist for the Observer, a Sun Media newspaper in Sarnia, Ontario, has picked up Michaels’ complaint.

Hello, big publishers? I love p-books, but it’s time to stop being so bleepin’ print-centric and to grasp the obvious—that it’s much harder to control the movement of electrons than of atoms. About half of TeleRead’s thousands of readers live outside the United States, and I’m delighted. Imagine where we’d be today if we had to worry about territories. Someone, somewhere, has suggested that rights might be sold by language rather than geography. Possible compromise?

 
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