How To Buy An Ebook And Make Sure That You Own It

Buy an Ebook and Keep It

When you buy an ebook online, do you purchase it or only rent it?

Then, after this consideration, what restrictions come with either choice?

The issue of ebook ownership has been discussed extensively in newspapers and publishing blogs.

Although very convenient, the most popular ebook retail platforms often impose strict limitations on your ebook purchases.

DRM is a problem when you buy an ebook

Ebook retailers like Amazon Kindle Books, Google Play Books, and Apple iBooks use Digital Rights Management (DRM).

It limits your ability to back up, copy, lend, or update because retailers place strict restrictions on an ebook file.

Proprietary file types lock your ebook purchase into a walled garden on Amazon or Apple, for instance.

DRM is the most common form of controlling a digital file after you think you have purchased an ebook.

The much-publicized stories of a user’s Kindle being wiped of all previous purchases by Amazon and Barnes and Noble’s limit on updating an ebook after a credit card expires are examples of how ebook control can work.

Do you own ebooks with DRM?

No, you are only renting them.

Licensing agreements restrict what you can do with an ebook and give retailers a lot of control.

But who reads these agreements or terms and conditions when they buy an ebook?

So, what can you do to ensure that when you buy an ebook, you buy it with no or next to no limitations?

 

How can you really buy an ebook?

The easiest answer is to buy DRM-free ebooks in .epub format.

Most popular e-reading devices can read .epub files. But the Kindle device is an exception.

For Kindle users, the most suitable is the .mobi file type, which is also DRM-free. However, this file type is being phased out. But now you can send .epub files to a Kindle using the Send to Kindle app or by email.

Some retailers are now offering ebooks that are both DRM-free and in popular file types to suit almost all e-reading devices.

Smashwords, Draft2Digital, and Kobo are at the forefront of DRM-free ebook sales.

Another very useful tool to use to ensure you own your ebooks is Calibre.

If you can’t locate a DRM-free version of an ebook for your device on your preferred retailer, see if you can buy or download a DRM-free epub version of the ebook elsewhere.

Then, use Calibre to convert the ebook file to the type used by your device.

 

Amazon Kindle DRM-free ebooks

You can sometimes find Kindle ebooks on Amazon that do not use DRM.

But you have to hunt, and there are not many of them.

Amazon certainly doesn’t make it easy to tell, either.

Instead of stating that a particular ebook is DRM-free, you need to check the Product details section.

If there is an entry for “Simultaneous device usage ‏: ‎Unlimited,” the ebook is not protected by DRM.

Amazon DRM free ebooks

 

Convenience vs. ownership

While one-click purchasing and instant delivery to your device may seem appealing, the drawbacks often outweigh this convenience.

Perhaps when you would like to lend your purchased ebook to your spouse and then discover you can’t, for instance.

Just an extra few seconds spent at the time of purchase may bring you many more advantages.

One of the simplest ways to load DRM-free ebooks onto most devices is with email.

Almost all e-reading devices have an email facility.

It is just a matter of downloading or buying the correct file type or converting using Calibre and then emailing the file to your e-reader.

Open and start reading.

Then, you know that you have really purchased an ebook that, like physical books, you can share, lend, copy, back up, and keep forever.

 

Summary

Yes, you might have to change your ebook buying habits.

But if you buy DRM-free ebooks, you can save and share them with friends or read them on different devices or reading apps.

Another benefit is creating a library and backing up all your ebooks.

The choice is up to you.

 

Related reading: How You Can Lose All The Ebooks You Purchased Because Of DRM

Scroll to Top