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This week, Amazon is eliminating the “Download & Transfer via USB” option for Kindle users. If you own a vast library and hope to take your reading elsewhere, this may be your last opportunity.
Amazon has stated in a note on users’ library management page that, starting Wednesday, Feb. 26, it was eliminating “Download & Transfer via USB. All Kindle e-book owners will be restricted to downloading Kindle books via WiFi. The former option was one of the last loopholes readers could use to take their proprietary Kindle format e-books off Amazon’s closed ecosystem. This deposited files in the AZW3 format, and there are more tricks for disabling DRM with those files than with the more modern KFX format. The USB download option also backed up Kindle books in case something happened to your device or your Amazon account.
There are a growing number of non-Amazon e-book brands, like Bookshop.org, but the issue is Amazon uses its market dominance to source exclusive deals, both in audiobooks and e-books. Considering that, we suggest you do your best to download your current library before it’s too late. If you want to send your e-book library to your computer, go to Amazon first, then click Accounts & Lists. Scroll to Content Library, then click on Books. Click on the “More actions” option for the book you want to download, then select the Download & transfer via USB button.
When they’re downloaded to your PC, you may be able to convert them to other viable reading formats. “Download & Transfer via USB” is a known hack in the Kindle community, used to remove the DRM locks on some older e-book formats. So, if you want to lend your friend an e-book like you would any paperback, this was one of the few ways to do so without dealing with Amazon’s arcane subscription infrastructure. Kindle lets you share books with others but restricts it to members of your “household.”
Kindle devices remain some of the best e-readers, though they’re also very pricey. For example, look at the recent Colorsoft Kindle, which cost $280. The most recent Kindle Paperwhite sells for $160. Other e-readers like the $150 Onyx Boox Go 6 are still beholden to the Kindle if you end up with most of your books locked to Amazon’s restricted platform. And that’s a problem since Amazon has removed books from its platform without notifying users. The company removed George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four and several other e-books from users’ libraries in 2009, with reports saying it was due to licensing issues.
As the Kindle terms of service make it clear, owning any Kindle content means you own a “license” for that e-book, not the e-book itself. You only have a right to view the content “solely through Kindle software” and only on “supported devices specified in the Kindle store.” Some open-source apps like Calibre can read most e-book formats, and if you download your books now, you can use them to read your Kindle library without Amazon’s blessing.
That’s why we suggest you also check Libby, a library app that connects with local libraries and allows you to get in line to download and read e-books for a set period (and yes, this does support your local library). Don’t forget to check out Project Gutenberg if you’re trying to find a classic title in EPUB format. If all you want is DRM-free literature, try e-Books.com.