Molyneux wrote:I dont' give a fuck if the copy is electronic rather than physical - when you buy a book, you buy it, not rent it.
I actually agree with you on this point, in that it
should be this way, but as copyright law stands in the US and with most US trade partners, this isn't true in the legal sense. Other media have exceptions written into the law that applies some sense to owner's rights, mostly thanks to court precedent; digital media haven't quite gotten there yet.
Consequently, when you pay for a book from most of these electronic stores, you are in fact paying for a license to use a work, not ownership of the work (you get ownership with physical books largely thanks to the First Sale doctrine -- one of those exceptions I mentioned before). Even though this isn't written into the law per se, the illegality of breaking DRM enforces it in practice.
The law in this area is surprisingly arbitrary, with exceptions for some things (radio, VCRs, Xerox machines) while criminalizing others, even though they result in the same thing: people experiencing a work without paying for it. Chalk most of this up to what rights-holders feel about the topic, versus any sensible policy.
All those moments will be lost in time... like tears in rain...