FSF launches campaign against Amazon DRM

 

Petition in wake of Orwell withdrawal fiasco.

The free Software federation has launched an online campaign to persuade Amazon to drop its use of digital rights management (DRM) technology and let customers decide what to do with their e-books.

The group has set up an electronic petition to persuade amazon to open up its user agreements and rethink its policy on DRM. The petition has already been signed by Richard Stallman, Creative Commons and Change Congress co-founder Lawrence Lessig and Harvard Law Professor John Palfrey.

"The level of control Amazon has over their e-books conflicts with basic freedoms that we take for granted," said Palfrey.

"In a future where books are sold with digital restrictions, it will be impossible for libraries to guarantee free access to human knowledge."

The move was sparked in part by Amazon's decision to remove books from its Kindle customers, even though they had been bought legitimately, at the publisher's request. Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos apologised for the incident but refused to rule out doing it again.

"The freedom to read without supervision or interference is central to a free society," said FSF executive director Peter Brown.

"When e-book products like the Kindle use DRM to restrict what users can do with their books, that is a clear threat to the free exchange of ideas."

Copyright ©v3.co.uk


FSF launches campaign against Amazon DRM
 
 
 
 
 
Top Stories
Vito Forte: A CIO for tough times
Fortescue Metals CIO talks vendor management and innovation.
 
Telstra shifts BigPond email to Windows Live
All data to be migrated to Microsoft cloud.
 
Vodafone Australia churn nears half a million for 2011
British joint owners 'not pleased'.
 
Sign up to receive iTnews email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...

Latest VideosSee all videos »

Latest Comments
Polls
Would you be concerned about your business' email data being hosted offshore?

   |   View results
Yes
  85%
 
No
  15%
TOTAL VOTES: 229

Vote