TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

Does Anybody Know Of A Legal Way To Get A Kindle Book That Is Available For Sale In England But Not

Does anyone know where i can read "Identical" by Ellen Hopkins free online without.....?

having to pay for it. completely free...if i have to download it for like adobe that's fine. but please tell me how i can do it. and if you say "there is no way", "its illegal", "buy the book and dont be lazy" or anything along the lines of that, i will just spam you.

Is it legal to print Kindle books?

When you “buy” a kindle book, you don’t own it. You are licensing it from Amazon.Here is Amazon’s Kindle Store terms of serviceUse of Kindle Content. Upon your download of Kindle Content and payment of any applicable fees (including applicable taxes), the Content Provider grants you a non-exclusive right to view, use, and display such Kindle Content an unlimited number of times, solely through a Reading Application or as otherwise permitted as part of the Service, solely on the number of Supported Devices specified in the Kindle Store, and solely for your personal, non-commercial use. Kindle Content is licensed, not sold, to you by the Content Provider. The Content Provider may include additional terms for use within its Kindle Content. Those terms will also apply, but this Agreement will govern in the event of a conflict. Some Kindle Content, such as interactive or highly formatted content, may not be available to you on all Reading Applications.This passage makes it sound like you only have rights to view the content through a “reading application” and for personal use. I wonder is paper is considered a reading application.Best to email Kindle and ask them: kindle-cs-support@amazon.com

I want to buy Amazon's Kindle ebook reader. But I want to know do we have to buy (pay prices) the books from its library or they are available free of cost?

If you buy a Kindle from Amazon you have a wide variety of choices for books at a wide range of prices.The easiest way to get books is to buy them from Amazon. Here you have a couple of choices.Buy commercially priced books for your Kindle. This will range in price from the cost of a new paperback, perhaps $6.99 or so (with rare exceptions for sale items) up to $14.99 for new releases. (Which Amazon would like to push down to $9.99.) Use Amazon's store to read free books. This includes a wide variety of material that has gone out of copyright, often scraped from Project Gutenberg, along with self-published and promotional material.I would suggest you go to the Kindle store and look at the list of best-selling free titles to get an idea of what is available there. Your Kindle can also read just about anything that is in PDF or TXT format, but you will have a hard time finding popular material in this format.Some US libraries are lending books to Kindle users, but because there is no legal requirement that publishers offer books this way, the number of books is currently very limited.If all you are concerned about is price, the best way to buy books is via the resale market. If you made a list of books you wanted to read, the odds are you could find 50% of them for sale at a total cost of under $5 each on half.com.eReaders from Amazon or others offer a lot of nice things: convenience, impulse purchase capability, large storage capacity, web access, and so on. But at this time, they are not going to win over the frugal shopper.Update 4/3/2014:After moving across country, I am happy to say that my new public library has a good selection of electronic books available for checkout. It appears that the backend support for all this comes from Overdrive.The books that I check out are usually available in Kindle format. When I borrow a book in Kindle format, Overdrive has to get some sort of DRM handshake from Amazon, and the book appears in my Kindle library.Overdrive also supports other formats, and they can be read on the Kindle with Adobe's app.I've made heavy use of the system, and as the library adds more books, I am finding that I use it more and more.- Mark

I have a kindle fire and my parents wont let me buy books. What should I do?

I'm turning 17 in a few days and its not like I have a credit card but I HAVE cash. My personal cash from Christmas presents that id like to save but I asked my parents if I could just get an amazon giftcard so I could buy books with my money on my kindle hut they said no Bc they want me to save it for when I need books for school or something. Wff? They're my parents. First of all, they ought to provide for me so they ought to be buying my school books and second- I don't even need any more books for school for the year. I asked for a nook for Christmas so I could 'borrow' them or read them for free at b&n but they got me a kindle fire instead Bc they thought it was better and yeah there are free books on the kindle but I want others. I love reading so the point of this wasn't to use this device as an ipad or whatever. I want to read!! Wtf? I'm about to just tell them to return it for being so difficult. This isn't what I had in mind. At all.

Is there a website to get free Kindle books?

Please respect the rights of authors and pay properly for for-purchase ebooks.

The 14 sites listed here (Patricia Clark Memorial Library, ManyBooks, Project Gutenberg, Smashwords, Feedbooks, Baen, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Creative Commons Books, Google ebookstore, Internet Archive, Open Library, Sony Reader Store, and Kobo eBooks) have legal, free ebook downloads:

http://www.howtodecide.com/ebook-downloa...

Also, if you master a good conversion tool such as Calibre,

http://calibre-ebook.com/

you'll gain access to more formats (such as EPUB) than just Kindle's native ebook file formats (AZW, MOBI, PDF). Calibre will not, however, overcome DRM of protected for-purchase books.

Where can I download richelle mead Bloodlines ebook?

There is no FREE and LEGAL place you can download Richelle Mead's books. She depends on sales of her books to pay the mortgage and groceries.

Any "free" copy is stolen property. The uploader can go to jail and pay up to $150,000 in fines.

As author Lillith Saintcrow says:
E-piracy is “not a black and white issue,” you say. **** that. Taking without paying for is called stealing. Piracy is people stealing my ******* books, and it doesn’t get much more black and white than STEALING IS WRONG.

Is it legal to read a book in a book store without buying it.?

Yes, it is legal. They (the retailers, publishers, authors, illustrators, etc.) would, however, strongly prefer that you buy the book, as that is how they get paid for their labours.

I, for one, have done it. I read "Confessions of a Street Addict" by Jim (Mad Money) Cramer, and "Every Patient Tells a Story" by Dr. Lisa Sanders (Tech consultant for "House, MD"), while sitting in the cafe at my local Barnes & Noble.

I also read, while sitting in the cafe at Borders "The Autobiography of Santa Claus."

No one (from either store) said a word to me.

If I live in the UK, how do I buy and read US Kindle books?

Many of the Kindle books available in the US are also available in the UK. If they're not, it's probably because the publisher only secured North American rights to the title and isn't legally allowed to sell it in other countries.That being said, you can find many such titles on other third-party stores, so if Amazon doesn't allow you to purchase US Kindle books, then your best bet is to purchase .mobi or .prc files on a non-Amazon site. Mobi and prc are the two native Kindle file formats, and depending on the kind of genres you prefer, you can find a great many sites selling those file formats. Fictionwise.com, Omnilit.com, Diesel-ebooks.com, and booksamillion.com come to mind as providing a fair spread of general interest books under multiple file formats, and that's just off the top of my head. Many of these stores don't care what country you're from. You can also purchase ebooks in non-native file formats (such as .epub or .pdf) and convert them using Calibre, which is a free and legal conversion program.

TRENDING NEWS