In July, Macmillan CEO John Sargent outlined the changes in response to "growing fears that library lending was cannibalizing sales." On September 11, the American Library Association (ALA) started circulating a petition in hopes of pressuring Macmillan to not go through with its plan, which is scheduled to go into effect in November. "To treat libraries as an inferior consumer to the general population, it's the wrong thing to do," said Alan Inouye, director of the Office for Information Technology Policy at the ALA. "Libraries are generally held as amongst the highest esteemed institutions in the community."
"Allowing a library like the Los Angeles Public Library (which serves 18 million people) the same number of initial e-book copies as a rural Vermont library serving 1,200 people smacks of punishment, not support," librarian Jessamyn West wrote on CNN. She also points out that Sargent's claim that apps let people check out books in states and countries where they don't live "betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of how public libraries work." There are a few that let you pay for a library card regardless of where you live, but not many. Digital Trends reached out to Macmillan for comment but did not receive a response.
Source: https://www.digitaltrends.com/news/macmillan-e-books-library-waiting-period/
(Score: 1) by ncc74656 on Thursday September 19 2019, @07:23PM
I have a Kobo Glo HD...nice, clear hi-res screen, and I can load books into it through Calibre or I can point its web browser at the COPS instance that serves up my Calibre library.
(FWIW, I also picked up a used Kindle Touch dirt-cheap at one point when Amazon changed its DRM scheme, so that I'd continue to have access to purchases. Its serial number is plugged into a Calibre DRM-removal plugin; ebooks can be downloaded to your computer in the older format the Kindle Touch expects, which can still be cracked and converted for the Kobo or other readers. The Kindle doesn't get used nearly as much as a reader.)