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Absolutely correct
With the Web connection, publishers have the power to erase, lock, edit, or otherwise change the terms of your "purchase" after the fact. They have been dreaming of this for decades: at long last, no more libraries or used book stores.

The first sale doctrine is dead; long live the EULA!
Posted by: Yagotta B. Kidding   Posted on: 06/18/09 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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Human mind.....  Christian_<>< | 06/18/09
Poor Dana - A 4th dimension?  croberts | 06/18/09
I Would Think the Whole *Point*  Fevrin | 06/18/09
Books do not deserves 100% of your attention  T1Oracle | 06/18/09
All books require 100% attention  croberts | 06/19/09
It should stand on its own  DanaBlankenhorn ZDNet Moderator | 06/18/09
Completely Agree  mgalactico1 | 06/18/09
There is work to it  DanaBlankenhorn ZDNet Moderator | 06/18/09
Absolutely correct  Yagotta B. Kidding | 06/18/09
I don't think that's the point  DanaBlankenhorn ZDNet Moderator | 06/18/09
With great power  Yagotta B. Kidding | 06/18/09
Correction regarding text-to-speech  dkawalec | 06/18/09
And this changes -- what?  Yagotta B. Kidding | 06/18/09
The power in the Kindle ...  dkawalec | 06/18/09
RE: Where is the power in ebooks?  tioedong@... | 06/18/09
Funny - I Always Thought the "Power" in the eBook Was Convenience  drprod@... | 06/19/09
The power in E-books lies in E-books  zldsar14 | 06/22/09
Non-Fiction is about linking, Fiction is not  jcasman27 | 06/22/09
RE: Where is the power in ebooks?  manoju | 06/23/09

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