Your Kindle e-books just got locked down even tighterWith stricter DRM in place, your Kindle library is now even harder to back up.

Your Kindle e-books just got locked down even tighterKindle e-books just got harder to back up.
Credit: Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority
TL;DR
  • Amazon’s latest Kindle update makes it almost impossible to remove DRM from newly downloaded e-books.
  • A jailbreak specialist says the e-books are now tied to a hidden “account secret” only accessible with a previously jailbroken device.
  • It follows earlier restrictions like removing USB transfers and blocking downloads on older versions of the Kindle Android app.

Amazon just rolled out a change to its Kindle e-readers that could frustrate anyone who likes to keep permanent copies of their e-books. The newest firmware update, version 5.18.5, strengthens Amazon’s Digital Rights Management (DRM) — the copy-protection system that prevents people from freely backing up or transferring Kindle books.

Goodereader reported the change, citing a post on the Mobileread forum that the publication identified as from one of the lead developers of a jailbreak method. In the poster’s explanation, they said the new system applies fresh encryption to any newly downloaded e-books, regardless of when they were originally purchased or published. Books where the publisher has opted out of copy-protection are not affected.

With stricter DRM in place, your Kindle library is now even harder to back up.Matt Horne2025-09-25T20:39:44.000Z{}

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Here’s an early look at how app lock and other Android 17 changes are coming togetherCan't get enough of those translucent volume bars.

New iPhone Fold leak reveals cameras, but does it beat the Galaxy Z Fold 7?A fresh leak suggests the foldable iPhone may have a pair of 48MP cameras and a smaller display than previously rumored.

Samsung Galaxy M36 announced with Exynos 1380 and 5,000mAh battery