Peter Purgathofer, an associate professor at Vienna to University of Technology, Built a Lego Mindstorms robot That presses “nextpage” on his Kindle Repeatedly the while in t Interfaces his laptop’s webcam. The cam snaps a picture of each screen and saves it to a folder That is Automatically processed through an online optical character recognition software. The result is an automated means of redigitizing DRM crippled ebooks in a clear digital format. It’s clunky Compared to simply Removing the DRM using common software, but unlike Those DRM circumvention tools, this setup does not violate the law.
He says he got the idea for using the
It’s not intended as a statement against e-books, Which he loves, he says, but rather what he considers a “dramatic loss of rights for the book owner. “The owner isn’ta even an owner anymore but rather a licensee of the book,” he says.
Another thing: He’s only ever scanned one book, and that was just to specimen the concept. And he doing now? Shared it anywhere “… since it would get me into deep trouble,” he says.
How a Man in Austria Used Legos to Hack Amazon’s Kindle E-Book Security [Arik Hesseldahl / AllThingsD]
( excelent, Paul! )
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