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An Orwellian moment for Amazon's customers as '1984' vanishes

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Users of Amazon.com's e-reader device were surprised and unsettled over the past day to receive notice that George Orwell works they had purchased, including "1984" and "Animal Farm," had been removed from their Kindle and their money refunded.



Lawsuit: Amazon Ate My Homework


An Orwellian gaffe involving the Kindle e-book reader just won’t go down the memory hole for Amazon.com.

On Thursday, a Chicago-based law firm filed a suit in federal court in Seattle against Amazon on behalf of Justin D. Gawronski, a 17-year-old Michigan high school senior. The suit, which seeks class-action status, claims that when the company wirelessly deleted a copy of George Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four” from Gawronski’s Kindle earlier this month, it also deleted the notes he had taken on the device for his homework.

The suit, which cites another plaintiff who also lost his copy of the Orwell classic, seeks to prevent Amazon from again deleting books from Kindles. It also seeks monetary relief for people like Gawronski who lost work from the incident.

Amazon declined comment on the suit. The company, which refunded the purchase price of Orwell books to people whose copies it deleted, has already said it would not do it again. Last week, the company’s CEO Jeff Bezos apologized for the incident, calling it “stupid, thoughtless, and painfully out of line with our principles.”

Gawronski, a member of his high school’s debate team, says he got a Kindle earlier this summer because he knew he’d be reading a lot of books for his Advanced Placement English class. “If there’s something that catches my eye as I am reading, I just place a note there” using the Kindle’s keyboard, he said. Those notes are useful, he said, because “every 100 pages we have to write a 1-page summary and reflection of everything that we read,” he said.

But on July 20, when Gawronski turned on his Kindle, he watched his copy of “Nineteen Eighty-Four” disappear right before his eyes. “It was a bit ironic,” he said.



see the Wall Street Journal article here

Cougar obviously late for conventionThe streets will run red, etc.

Comments

Karen 7. September 2009, 20:57

Meh...everyone's always suing each other. Is it just me, or does it get really old reading about this person suing that person for the most lame-ass reasons?

Robert Hurley 7. September 2009, 21:38

the reason the story interested me is due to the fact that independent bookstores are going out of business by the shitload, and Amazon is putting itself in a position where they have so much sway over the retail book market, that they can almost dictate which books get published, and which (due to having no prospect of profitability) get passed over.

the lawsuit was something I just considered a side-story

Karen 7. September 2009, 21:56

Ah, yeah. I get'cha. Amazon pisses me off a lot - they're the WalMart of the Net. :down:

:sst: Sadly, I have to shop at WalMart. I'm poor like that.

Robert Hurley 7. September 2009, 22:20

the only time I ever shopped at WalMart, it was very much against my will. I absolutely needed to purchase two items, and I had to sponge a ride off someone, and the closest place was walmart.

Both items were broken within 24 hours.

Instant Karma gonna get yoouuu...



Karen 7. September 2009, 22:40

Homer: Doh! That's a horrible story!

My Dad has never shopped there. He refuses to. He tries to support K Mart as much as possible since they're going under in most places.

Robert Hurley 7. September 2009, 22:53

I also don't shop the Gap, Old Navy or (a cynical sneer here) Banana Republic. All are owned by a crypto-fascist named Fischer, who donates to groups that target doctors who work for Planned Parenthood, and they purchase sweatshop goods almost exclusively.

Also, I've worked at their corporate headquarters-- and every last person who works there looks like a fucking Aryan android! Fucking creeeepy!

Karen 7. September 2009, 22:55

I've never shopped at those, either. Not because of anything important...only because they charge too much. p:

:eyes: Yes, that is very creepy!

slackwrdave 13. September 2009, 01:13

Watch out for K-Mart, too. They declare bankruptcy to stiff their creditors then turn around and buy Sears.

Robert Hurley 13. September 2009, 02:39

The streets will run red, etc.

Karen 14. September 2009, 21:24

Homer: Doh! No WalMart, no K Mart....soon 7-Eleven will be out. Then what?! How the Hell am I going to get my Slurpaccino?! :cry:

slackwrdave 15. September 2009, 02:58

Originally posted by Nerak:

How the Hell am I going to get my Slurpaccino?!


I think small exceptions can be made for personal pleasure. :D

Karen 15. September 2009, 03:21

Thank goodness! I was about to try to take out a loan for a Slurpee machine! :no:

Robert Hurley 20. October 2009, 19:26

I also don't shop the Gap, Old Navy or (a cynical sneer here) Banana Republic. All are owned by a crypto-fascist named Fischer, who donates to groups that target doctors who work for Planned Parenthood, and they purchase sweatshop goods almost exclusively.



He's dead now (a recent factory recall, obviously for defects). But there are hundreds more to take his place...

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