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DRM a drag on e-book growth, say critics

Amazon.com and Adobe both creating consumer-unfriendly hassles

February 18, 2009 12:00 PM ET

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Anonymous says: Amazon was one of the forces that pushed Apple to start selling DRM-free music. So what's up with Kindle and...
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Computerworld - Imagine bringing home a music CD from Best Buy and discovering that it will only play on some of your stereo equipment. Moreover, you're limited in the number of times you can switch the CD from one stereo to another.

That is the kind of restriction and hassle that e-book enthusiasts face today, according to critics, because of the widespread use -- misuse, they would argue -- of digital rights management (DRM) technology.

"I don't have to put on special glasses when I read a book published by Random House, so why should I need a special software reader from Adobe or someone else?" asked David Rothman, co-editor of the TeleRead e-book blog and an author of six nonfiction books. "It's a bizarre notion." DRM is nearly dead in the music industry, after Apple Inc.'s January decision to stop protecting songs sold through iTunes.

But DRM's use as an antipiracy tool continues in software and DVD publishing, as well as e-books.

The difference is that the e-book market remains nascent and fragile. According to the International Digital Publishing Forum, wholesale revenue from U.S. e-book sales last year totaled just $52.4 million. (IDPF's figures only include a dozen leading publishers, and should be doubled to arrive at a more realistic retail dollar sales total.)

Sales of dedicated e-book readers such as Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle or Sony Corp.'s Sony Reader were slightly better. Last year, just 538,000 e-book readers worth $154 million were shipped, according to the Consumer Electronics Association.

Critics said two of the biggest champions of e-books, Amazon.com and Adobe Systems Inc., are potentially stunting the industry's long-term growth with their strong support for DRM. They also criticize the two vendors' lukewarm support -- at best -- for the emerging open e-book publishing standard known as .epub, in favor of their own proprietary ones.

For instance, Amazon's Kindle favored format is its own, DRM-restricted AZW e-book format. Those who purchase an e-book on their Kindle cannot transfer it to read on their PC or iPhone, though Amazon hinted earlier this month that it might allow that in the future.

Amazon has also negotiated exclusive rights for Kindle e-books from author Stephen King and biographies of First Lady Michelle Obama and Cindy McCain, the wife of last year's Republican presidential nominee, Sen. John McCain, (R-Ariz.).

"There are wonderful people at both Adobe and Amazon.com," Rothman said, "but if I were them, I'd worry less about my slice of the pie, and more about growing the total pie."

Meanwhile, Adobe continues to hawk DRM-protected versions of its PDF format and the open .epub format at book publishers, rather than the plain-vanilla, non-DRM-protected version of .epub.



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