9

I’m very pleased to be able to write for TeleRead. I’ll be focusing my posts on the Amazon Kindle, including some technical tips and tricks. For a good overview of who I am and what I do, read Kat Meyer’s TeleRead Q&A with me—or take a look at my Web site.

image In his interview yesterday on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon.com, mentioned in passing that publishers get to decide whether they want to have DRM on their books. This is a repeat of what he said to Kirk Biglione last year, but it seems that no one has actually seen DRM-free Kindle books in the wild.

The ability to put a book up for sale on the Kindle store DRM-free is definitely not available to the large number of individual authors and small publishers using the Digital Text Platform (DTP). Many of them would be very interested in that opportunity—possibly even more than the majority of big publishers who have direct contact with Amazon. What’s also interesting about this is Amazon’s statement in the DTP Terms and Conditions:

10. Technology. You acknowledge that we will be entitled to utilize DRM technology in connection with the distribution of Digital Books but are not obligated to do so. Accordingly, there may be no technology or other limitation imposed by us on copying or transfer of any Digital Book we distribute.

I have to wonder if Jeff’s public message is out of touch with how things really are behind the scenes at Amazon. The Kindle does not appear to be "DRM agnostic," as he claimed to Biglione, but if you can really publish books without DRM then Amazon should be applauded. As it is, I think that policy needs to be more prominent and it needs to be passed down to the DTP.

Transcript of the relevant discussion:

JS: How do you keep people from pirating—from downloading books to other books and passing them around? Like, how do you protect the authors’ authorship?

JB: Well, publishers get to decide, do they want to put, uh, you know to encrypt the books and put DRM on or not—

JS: Who?

JB: DR–It stands for Digital Rights Management. It’s a technology—

JS: Oh yeah….

JF: So the publishers get to decide whether they want to do that to different books and some do and some don’t.

 
9