- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.ml
Libraries also make a ton of copies and give them out for free.
This is just wrong.
If a library has purchased two copies of a piece of digital media - an ebook, for example - which patrons can check out online, only two people can have it checked out at once, and when the checkout period expires, the content is no longer available to the patron. Now a copy is freed up for the next person to check out.
Jawhol!
Libraries also make a ton of copies and give them out for free.
This is just wrong.
For decades, libraries freely made copies digital media. It’s only been recently that powerful cabals have made it illegal for them to do so.
No, they don’t. If you’re referring to their ebook selections, they pay for a specific number of licenses to an ebook, then only allow a specific number of patrons to check those ebooks out at any given time. They do this using DRM, to ensure that patrons have their access removed when their checkout period is up. Because refusal to comply would run them afoul of copyright laws and their ebook licensing.
Isn’t this simply a contrivance to uphold a questionable system?
Are you comparing things that are physically limited by nature to something that is made artificially limited by a trade cartel?