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image Remember how I said that Mobipocket‘s DRM requirement—no distribution by Mobi without it!—was delaying the appearance of The Solomon Scandals at Diesel eBooks? Lida Quillen, publisher of Twilight Times Books, had hoped that Mobi would accept a non-DRMed file of my novel. No such luck! So she wrote me of the resultant delay.

I’m pleased to report that the delay was short, perhaps a day or two. This weekend she was able to track down the documentation and create a DRMed file. But guess what. Lida is far, far sharper technically than the typical small publisher, and up until then, she didn’t know what would happen. Elsewhere there might well have been a DRM-caused delay of days—or maybe even weeks if an overworked publisher had to move on to something else.

The big lesson: Amazon IS inflicting DRM on publishers who hate it

image Of course, the main question remains. Why is Jeff Bezos going on TV and giving the impression that he doesn’t care about DRM—at least in a Kindle context, and presumably in a Mobi, too. Jeff, your company is very keen on inflicting DRM on Quillen-style publishers even when they intensely dislike it. Otherwise why couldn’t Lida do business with Mobi without messing with this anti-consumer technology that prevents us from owning e-books for real? Can’t you give publishers a choice, just as you promise to do in the case of text-to-speech on the Kindle 2?

Meanwhlie stay tuned for Diesel eBooks to post and promote Scandals; I’ll let you know. Like Books on Board, Diesel will be giving Scandals a nice sendoff (for several weeks on the Diesel home page in rotation, according to owner Scott Redford).

Out of fairness to Mobipocket: The DRMed Scandals is now on sale at the Mobipocket store at the list price of $5.95.

 
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