gizmodo.com — Forget blaming it on the dog, thanks to Amazon students have a 21st century excuse for lost homework. When Amazon foolishly yanked 1984 from thousands of Kindles, Justin Gawronski's electronic notes for a summer assignment became useless.
Jul 30, 2009 View in Crawl 4
bjornskiAug 3, 2009
No. The Copyright Police did. They're just as evil.
lldiggerAug 4, 2009
well as books and cd's can be damaged, so can harddrives. Also, have you HAD THE SAME STORAGE DEVICE FOR 10 YEARS? If you made a new copy of a book every time you got a new computer/storage device, i'm sure the book would last forever.
buckrogers1965Aug 6, 2009
Your notes are worth as much as you care to price them at. Amazon bought your notes at that value by accepting your contract when they deleted the notes without your permission. This is the same way you can end up buying a broken plate at full value in a china shop.
Closed AccountAug 18, 2009
Hi, Old fashion!
Closed AccountAug 18, 2009
"For example, In the case Me v. Amazon.com Inc., we see a direct parallel between Winston's position at the Ministry of Truth and this corporation deleting my literature. "
Closed AccountAug 18, 2009
An excuse for a lawsuit. You should get one!