…….. surely it must be a carefully thought out marketing strategy.
On 17 July 2009 owners of an Amazon Kindle who had bought copies of George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm found their copies deleted remotely and their purchase refunded to their accounts
HOLY CRAP
It's something of a worry for me as this year after having to pack up all my books for a move I promised myself that I had purchased my last hard copy book. (Emergency by Neil Strass if you are interested) I had heard good things about the Kindle, admittedly all about the US edition with its wireless capabilities, but so much so I was considering handing over the hard earn readies when it was picked up by an Australian distributor.
But after Amazon’s tanty last year attempting to remove listings on ‘Adult material’ but which seems to have selectively and disproportionaly targeted authors of homosexual, gay or queer writings as covered in Flinhart’s blog here.
Now this latest stunt. You wonder if Amazon has been bought out by the fundamentalists.
Surely someone at Amazon is self aware enough to have realised to retrospectively try and remove a book you purchased from you, which was described by one of the readers of David Pogue’s Tech Blog at The New York Times “….it’s like Barnes & Noble sneaking into our homes in the middle of the night, taking some books that we’ve been reading off our nightstands, and leaving us a check on the coffee table..”. is particularly rediculous when it involves books that as a theme talk about cencorship and control of knowledge.
On 17 July 2009 owners of an Amazon Kindle who had bought copies of George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm found their copies deleted remotely and their purchase refunded to their accounts
HOLY CRAP
It's something of a worry for me as this year after having to pack up all my books for a move I promised myself that I had purchased my last hard copy book. (Emergency by Neil Strass if you are interested) I had heard good things about the Kindle, admittedly all about the US edition with its wireless capabilities, but so much so I was considering handing over the hard earn readies when it was picked up by an Australian distributor.
But after Amazon’s tanty last year attempting to remove listings on ‘Adult material’ but which seems to have selectively and disproportionaly targeted authors of homosexual, gay or queer writings as covered in Flinhart’s blog here.
Now this latest stunt. You wonder if Amazon has been bought out by the fundamentalists.
Surely someone at Amazon is self aware enough to have realised to retrospectively try and remove a book you purchased from you, which was described by one of the readers of David Pogue’s Tech Blog at The New York Times “….it’s like Barnes & Noble sneaking into our homes in the middle of the night, taking some books that we’ve been reading off our nightstands, and leaving us a check on the coffee table..”. is particularly rediculous when it involves books that as a theme talk about cencorship and control of knowledge.
What’s next, wiping out copies of Bradbury’s ‘Fahrenheit 451’ with a little flaming icon on the screen while it was removed.
Though its all over who owns the rights to republish electronic copies of Orwell’s books needless to say I am rethinking my plans to purchase a Kindle as my eBook reader. Scifi’s Scott Edelman has quipped - As Orwell once wrote, "Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows." To that we add, freedom is the freedom to keep the book we paid for.
My favourite news quote so far about this is by Seattlest’s “Amazon's Kindle--Now with New Take-Backsies Feature”.
Anyone got any e-book readers they would suggest?
It's all very strange, of course I'll only get really worried when any books mentioning the singularity start disapearing....
ReplyDeleteWell, I guess ya can't get e-Stick Mags from Amazon.
ReplyDeleteMakes you wonder about what you own and what you don't. No matter that you have paid your hard earned money for it.
ReplyDeleteBurn the Kindles in the town square! So technologically advanced yet still so archaic in thought. Ironic for sure.
ReplyDeleteThat is weird and disturbing.
ReplyDeleteI was gonna blog about this the Geek, but I reckon you've covered the ground.
ReplyDeleteChazfh
ReplyDeleteHow do you know that there are books out their that mentioned the singularity but they have dissapeared? You just remember the few they let you remember to assuage your concerns. I start being concerned when YOU no longer post about your concerns.
Moko
You can't? Another reason not to get a Kindle then.
Domestic Daze
They obviously know better than us about what we bought, if we just accept that then no one has to be beaten and taken away for re-education.
Heidi Germanaus
I like the cut of your jib, pass the firestarters please.
becomingkate
thats what they wrote on my last work assessemnt report
Birmo
Please do, I'd be stoked if I'd written something that was a half as witty and clever as one of your posts on the Geek.