One of the reason I decided to quit reading ebooks as much as I can (started a little over a year ago) is that with print I fully own the books I purchase, there is no single corporation, not even Amazon, that is allowed to enter my house in order to 'remove' or delete a book from my bookshelves, and then when it's a book I borrow from the public library, I don't need to fight against DRM nor do I need to use an approved pair of eyes to be authorized to read it.
DRM
A community for the discussion of topics surrounding DRM, Digital Rights Management.
All media that DRM can be applied on can be discussed here, for example books, movies, music or games.
Digital rights management (DRM) is the management of legal access to digital content. Various tools or technological protection measures, such as access control technologies, can restrict the use of proprietary hardware and copyrighted works. DRM technologies govern the use, modification and distribution of copyrighted works (e.g. software, multimedia content) and of systems that enforce these policies within devices. DRM technologies include licensing agreements and encryption.
Guides and useful tools
Quick and dirty way to rip an eBook from Android
2025 Guide for freeing books from Amazon (after D&T was removed)
Guide to Removing DRM From Amazon Kindle E-Books
Liberate your Kindle books before leaving Amazon (Tutorial)
How to setup Calibre to remove DRM from ebooks on Linux/Archive mirror
Guide on removing DRM from Kobo & Kindle eBooks (reddit mirror, Archive link)
Extracting content from an LCP "protected" ePub
DeDRM tools for eBooks: a plugin for Calibre for removing Adobe DRM, Obok etc.
Miscellaneous links
DRM - Frequently Asked Questions by DefectiveByDesign
Guide to DRM-Free Living by DefectiveByDesign
I totally get your POV. Though for me at least, I like the ease and comfort of just having my e-reader with me, especially when travelling or reading huge books that are a pain to flip through lying on the couch. I still have a sizeable physical library, especially for poetry, textbooks or books I really really like.
I understand that. I started reading ebooks in the early 00s and never looked back. It was perfect for a voracious reader like me. And I must admit switching back to print I kinda miss their practicality, but not in any significant manner (I also tend to only carry small books with me, like poetry or stuff like that)
But the realization of the quick erosion of our right to privacy and the disintegration of the very notion of 'ownership'... Well, I wrote a little more in details about that on my blog if you're interested. Am I reading or Am I Being Read by the book? and Who Owns the Ebook I Purchase?
Before I started reading ebooks I was an avid book collector (mostly into rare/original editions). Switching to ebooks made me quit all that and to get rid of my personal library... Some 25 years later I'm slowly rebuilding a personal print library but one that is not focused at all on the edition (I only worry about the quality of the binding/paper, as I want those books to be able to outlast me and be read by others once I'm gone) and much more on the content. It's also way more selective, I must say ;)
Edit: typos.
Completely fair! I'll check over your blog posts later, they definitely seem relevant to my interests. But either way I'd recommend you to post your blog posts on this community, they'd be a welcome addition as separate posts :)