Michael Motyka wrote:
E-books are already a fact, but most are sold with the same retail machinery as regular books, so changing the medium doesn't change the risk.
I mean something more along the lines of encrypting each of your electronic books and burning it to a CD. Nobody should be able to tell by looking what you read, nobody should be able to compromise someone else's library. Then the issue of reading habits become null. All tools should be open source. Essentially they already exist - just need a little packaging.
That's pretty much what I understood you to say. The problem is that somewhere in the bookdealers' and jobbers' archives, the sales record will have to be accessible by title and by customer or customer category. In the case of a cash sale, of course, there's no problem, but if a credit card was involved the dealer has to be able to retrieve the record by name in case there's a chargeback or complaint. So the vulnerability to a police razzia still exists. Marc