ratcreature: Tech-Voodoo: RatCreature waves a dead chicken over a computer. (voodoo)
RatCreature ([personal profile] ratcreature) wrote in [community profile] linux4all2013-02-03 06:46 pm
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PDFs with DRM

My local library "lends" ebooks, i.e. you download a PDF file but it will only open for two weeks and it only opens with the actual Acrobat Reader, not the non-proprietary PDF-viewers. I "borrowed" a Spanish grammar workbook, and it being a workbook I'd like to print the worksheets on my level to do them. And the ebook actually allows printing in the Acrobat Reader, but the result looks very low resolution and bad quality. Is this some perverted outgrowth of the DRM or can I do something, like fiddling with something in the Acrobat Reader, to make print output normal?
miriam_e: from my drawing MoonGirl (Default)

[personal profile] miriam_e 2013-03-27 01:02 pm (UTC)(link)
It's hard to see what publishers are actually trying to accomplish in making their products harder to use. I actually think that if they want to lock up their books and make them harder to use then we should let them have their way, and just not use them.

This kind of sick "protection" is what motivates people to spend time on undoing DRM locks. You might find some tools here that might help:
http://apprenticealf.wordpress.com/author/apprenticealf/

I try to avoid PDF like the awful plague that it is. It is a one-way format -- easy to move stuff into it, but hell to get it back out without losing styles and formatting. I know it isn't always possible to avoid PDF, but I will never give Adobe any of my money -- not since the Dimitry Skylarov incident.

I generally refuse to buy locked ebooks anyway, after of some nasty experiences I've had being locked out of my legitimately bought books. I only buy ebooks that don't have locks (e.g. from Baen Books), or ones I can remove the locks from.

The one thing you can guarantee with ebooks that have DRM encumbrances on them is that they will sooner or later lock you out.