That is not even the biggest problem. When people couldn’t use their music any way they wished, there was an outcry. People began to write articles and put out blog posts that seemed to get satan and the music labels all mixed up. For something that people seem to consume just as much as music – e-books, where is the outrage. Kneeling Chair confine your legs to at least one place, which may enhance pressures under the knee cap and sluggish circulation to the legs. How can any e-book publisher expect you to pay $20 for a book, and lose it the moment that reader dies or you switch readers? There are voices of protest, but not as many as there should be to get the ebook publisher community to change its ways.
How many times do we have to go around the same path to understand that when morbidly fearful publishers install badly-designed copy protection, all it does is make it difficult for paying customer to read a book that’s paid for? The customer has to jump through so many hoops every time, that he’s just refuses to do it anymore, and the copyright holder has to just abandon the whole thing. Wasn’t it wonderful when the music companies just dropped their hated copy protection and DRM?
What happens really when an e-book publisher or a famous band like Radiohead put their music or book out for free, but also sell it in the bookstores for a price? It has been tried, and it certainly doesn’t bankrupt anyone. People do download them for free if they can get them without paying for them. Kneeling Chairs position you with an open hip angle. Usually these are people who wouldn’t be able to afford to pay for it anyway, so you aren’t really losing anything; you only gain wider exposure. And paying customers pay too. For now, every ebook publisher is trying to at least make copy protection somewhat sensible. They’re making sure that if you buy an e-book for the Kindle, you can play it on any device. Going without copy protection does work. It doesn’t look like the music labels are filing for bankruptcy now does it?