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image Adobe and Sony are riding high now. The PR line is that ePub is the big winner, with 17 devices from Sony and others running Adobe software to read this open standard. Sony will be Adobe Exhibit #1 when the software company woos new customers for its reading software and content server.

ePub itself is open. But all this ePub talk is stealing attention from Adobe DRM, which comes with the software. DRM turns a nonproprietary format like ePub into a proprietary one. Adobe software will let you read nonDRMed ePub. But Adobe is hoping that big publishers will continue their DRM fixation even though this “protection” is a joke since the bad guys can defeat it with crackimg programs.

Striking back

In Amazon’s place, I would upgrade Kindles—at least the models that allowed this—to be able to read nonencrypted ePub just as the Adobe software can. Meanwhile I would do my best to convince publishers to drop DRM or use social DRM, with customers’ names embedded in books—and perhaps with some kind of text version of digital watermarking. Perhaps I would offer the publishers higher book prices to nudge them along.

Also, I would promote the concept of being able to own books for life, this way, without reliance on any company’s DRM servers. Via nonDRMed ePub, meanwhile, I could sell to owners of every bleepin’ machine that ran Adobe software.

The library side

If publishers insisted on DRM ePub for library use, I would reluctantly add this feature. But at the retail level, the main focus would be on lack of DRM. And long term, I would try to develop a cloud computing approach that allowed even library books to go online with DRM worries at the customer’s end.

In real life…

What will Jeff Bezos do in actual life? I don’t know: maybe he’ll strike an alliance with Adobe so his machines,too, can read Adobe-DRMed ePub. Just keep in mind, however, how he responded to Apple’s DRM-based iTunes monopoly—with a store selling nonDRMed MP3s. May he show similar sense here!

 
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