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image"In its insistence on DRM—not to mention its spotty selection, questionable pricing and glitchy software—Barnes & Noble’s e-book venture resembles nothing so much as the early, awkward attempts of record labels and the current, awkward attempts of movie studios to set up digital storefronts." – Rob Pegoraro, tech columnist, Washington Post.

image The TeleRead take: Right on the mark, Rob. B&N should differentiate itself from Amazon by playing down DRM. Why, oh why, is B&N so deaf? Granted, B&N’s DRM is much less obnoxious than Amazon’s kind, but DRM is DRM. People at none other than Fictionwise/eReader, B&N’s new acquisition, will tell you that good DRMless books from small publishers can be a major challenge to the corseted offerings of the large houses.

image If big publishers won’t go along, then B&N needs to start playing up content from more flexible companies and start an ad campaign focused on the right to own books for real (image is from current B&N promo). Why not a B&N ePub store without DRM included? Don’t lots of people define insanity as doing the same thing again and again without results? Under that definition, B&N is ready for the loony bin—not because it’s returning to e-books, but because it stubbornly refuses to experiment with a DRMless alternative on its main site.

Responding to another of Rob’s complaints, which I expressed earlier, B&N would also come out ahead if it genuinely integrated the shopping and reading software, so that it was Kindle-smooth. You shouldn’t need to fire up a browser to buy a book!

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