dbw reporting:
One oft-cited drawback of e-books is that they can’t be sold by the
original buyer and then resold as used books. The original buyer, after
all, is only purchasing license to use the file.
That all could change if a new ruling by the Court of Justice of the
European Union gains traction, according to GoodEReader, an e-reading
blog.
According to a ruling today
by the Court in a dispute between software giant Oracle and UsedSoft, a
used business software licensing site, original buyers of a digital
product license can resell that license to a third party, providing they
no longer use the digital product themselves. This could have
ramifications for e-books, which, like software, are licensed digital
files.
If e-books could be easily resold by readers, the effects on the
growing e-book industry would be great. Used e-bookstores could pop up;
new, exotic forms of digital rights management software could be
developed; and the price of e-books, facing upward pressure from their
new-found resale value and downward pressure from a used book market,
could change.
Unlike used print books, used e-books wouldn’t have dog-eared pages,
written-in notes from a previous owner or water damage. Then again,
future e-readers and e-reading software might be unable to read old,
out-of-date e-book files.
http://www.digitalbookworld.com/2012/used-e-books-coming-to-a-thrift-store-near-you/
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