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Amazon Kindle Discriminates Against the Blind, Says NFB, in Protest

Kindle Becomes a Flash Point for Protests

Who knew that that the Amazon Kindle would prove to be such a flash point for controversy? The device's text-to-speech capabilities rankled the Authors Guild, which then pushed Amazon to disable the feature, or at least allow publishers to opt out of it. This has, in turn, gotten the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) up in arms.

Today, the NFB is taking to the streets outside the Authors Guild's headquarters in New York, asking the guild to retract its demands that Amazon disable the feature. According to the NFB, the Authors Guild's stance discriminates against the blind, dyslexic, and others who have disabilities that make reading printed material difficult or impossible. When first asked by the NFB to reconsider their demands, the guild responded by proposing a Kindle registration process, by which a disabled person would be required to prove her disability in order to unlock (or pay for) the text-to-speech feature.

The NFB balked at the idea -- not surprisingly, since many Kindle owners already think that Kindle e-books are overpriced. A loosely organized group of 250 customers has been labeling books in the Kindle Store with the tag "9 99 Boycott" due to its belief that the e-books should cost no more than $10. It's a reasonable argument when you consider that most paperback books cost about $10 and are much more versatile than their e-book counterparts.

E-books, while infinitely portable, cannot be shared, donated, or sold. Due to Amazon's draconian use of digital rights management, or DRM, Kindle e-books can only be used with authorized accounts and cannot be transferred to non-Kindle devices (except for the iPhone, but only when paired with the Kindle application). Kindle e-books cannot be donated, either, so libraries are left out.

Considering the Authors Guild controversy, the counter reaction from the NFB, and the revolt of Kindle owners against e-book prices, Amazon may end up finding that the Kindle is more trouble than it's worth. But only if these setbacks can seriously dent the blockbuster sales of the device. [From: Wired, and ReadingRights.org]

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