Digital Rights Management (DRM) is one area of publishing and the eBook business that should be of particular interest to any author who wishes to protect their written work when using digital formats.
DRM relates to protecting creative output in digital media formats (CDs, DVDs, eBooks, etc.). DRM technology attempts to stop your written eBook being resold or duplicated without your permission. The music industry was slow to react in protecting their music in digital formats, meaning tunes were widely available on the net without the music publishers profiting.
The eBook business is different from the music industry though as eBooks are a result of the software sector rather than the book publishing sector. Consequently, written eBooks have incorporated innovation in DRM from the early days to protect the eBook’s contents.
In the early days, Adobe championed the PDF file format. Their software can constrict what PDF readers are permitted to do with a protected file. In particular, a PDF can disallow copying of the eBook text (a simple copy and paste of text to another document) and also stop the user from printing hard copies of the PDF file. This is DRM technology in action.
Most PDF file creators/readers/add-ons now provide this functionality. Some prime examples are the Adobe Reader and Microsoft Reader. The Microsoft reader goes one step further by ID stamping PDFs with the purchaser’s details in order to discourage sharing the PDF with others.
In recent times, the Kindle Reader can notify their home servers over an internet connection if eBooks are being illegally shared. The vendor can then decide how to deal with the file sharer (possibly through the courts). They could infact take the option of remotely removing the file off of the player (as they have already done http://mashable.com/2009/07/17/amazon-kindle-1984/). The ramifications of this to device owner’s privacy are yet to be fully understood but it is certain to be a hot topic over the coming years.
Software developers are now also including the ability to disable eBooks remotely. Some vendors can render a PDF unreadable using remote notifications if the customer uses a stolen credit card or is looking for a refund (2 widely used means of acquiring PDFs freely). For most authors writing eBooks, protecting their PDFs through simple configuration of PDF export/creation software is a simple solution that most will welcome.
These technological advancements in the eBook business may be too late in coming for the existing published PDFs. These still have copyright protection on their intellectual property once it is written. The new advancements in PDF security and copy protection should however make it even more secure and viable for the average person to start writing eBooks and start profiting from selling eBooks online.
Writing ebooks or software and want to publish and sell them online? Read Robert’s DLGuard review and get your software or ebook business online today.
categories: writing ebooks,ebook business,selling ebooks,selling software,selling software online,ecommerce,software,ebooks,internet,small business,publishing,sales


