Canadian Kindle Owners Forced To Leave American Kindle Content & Features Behind

from the nothing-in-it-for-the-customers-if-they-move,-and-even-less-if-they-stay dept

Something strange and potentially awful is happening to Amazon's users in various locations outside the US. Nate Hoffelder at The Digital Reader reports that Amazon's Canadian Kindle customers are being locked out of purchasing ebooks through Amazon's .com domain.
I have received multiple reports (here, here,here) today that Amazon is now refusing to allow their Canadian customers to buy Kindle ebooks from Amazon.com.

Over the past couple days several of those readers have reported that many Kindle titles are showing up on Amazon.com as not being available to Canadian customers even though the same titles will show up on Amazon.ca as being available.

So far as I can tell, the only ebooks still available to Canadian Kindle owners are titles distributed via KDP, seriously limiting their ability to make use of their Kindles.
What seems to be happening is a push by Amazon to move customers from other countries over to their local domains, something that has been reported in Brazil, Japan and France. Other news has filtered in that this is not necessarily Amazon's doing, but is a result of publishers "moving" product to non-US regions where pricing is still advantageous (i.e., not subject to the terms of the settlements reached with the Justice Department in the ebook price-fixing investigation).

No matter who is at fault, it's the users that are getting the shaft. Amazon has only been selling Kindle ebooks to Canadians since late in 2009, but many Canadians have been purchasing ebooks through Amazon's .com domain since 2007. (Its .ca Kindle store has only been around since December of 2012.) Forcing Canadian users to set up a new .ca account means that much of what their .com accounts contain won't transfer over.
First, while Amazon claims that any purchased ebooks will be available* after a Canadian Kindle owner transfers their account that’s not completely true. The ebooks might be transferred, but I’m told that a customer’s purchase history is not transferred and the wish lists are also abandoned. That’s going to make it a lot harder for some readers to keep track of what they own and what they want to buy.

Oh, and that claim about the Kindle content transferring isn’t exactly true. Amazon.ca doesn’t yet support subscriptions, nor does it offer Kindle Serials. That means this Kindle content will be lost in the transfer process along with any back issues that had been saved. What’s more, Amazon.ca doesn’t offer music and video so transferring an account will prevent customers from accessing media they’ve already purchased.
If it's publishers making this push solely to maximize pricing advantages in non-US countries, the prices being quoted by some .ca users don't seem to bear this out. (Others have reported higher prices as well, but it doesn't seem to be anything approaching "regulation-free" price hikes across the board.) However, one site did get a response from a publisher, which indicates the current issues are possibly at least partially their fault.
After speaking to Amazon Kindle support they informed us that this change was not their doing. They said a change like this would have been made by the publisher only. One of the major publishers affected responded back to me saying, “It certainly wasn’t our intentional doing; although it may be a side-effect of our pricing model. I’ll investigate and see what I can do.”
For Canadian users (and customers in Brazil, Japan, France, etc.), it doesn't really matter which party is forcing the migration. The end result is a very possible loss of purchased content and a definite loss of purchase histories, preferences and a number of other small, but essential, perks that are part of a long-term Amazon account. This is going to hit the most loyal customers the hardest -- the last thing Amazon should want to do.

While there are many ways to route around this new issue, the fact remains that migrating a customer's account should keep it intact, especially when there's no perceived benefit for the end user. If this is publishers reshuffling their offerings to take advantage of out-of-US pricing, it's in Amazon's best interest to point this out. If this is Amazon's doing, it needed to have the kinks worked out before pushing it on its customers.
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Filed Under: canada, ebooks, features, global restrictions, kindle
Companies: amazon


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  • identicon
    trish, 24 Jan 2013 @ 8:44am

    whats a kindle

    theres this 20$ gizmo they sell at walmart. its Ui is crap, but it plays any music, video, or text file. Less expensive, less headache, can do what I want with it, who needs a kindle? marketing win is what that is, nothing more.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      el_segfaulto (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:13am

      Re: whats a kindle

      Wrong. I don't like Amazon, but the Paperwhite the most used gadget in my collection. The e-ink is much easier on the eyes than a backlit LCD screen and the battery lasts for weeks.

      In fairness, the first thing I did when I bought it was root it and remove the ads. I haven't given a dime to Amazon (outside of the cost of the hardware) and purchase everything through 3rd party sources using Calibre to synchronize. It's an extremely locked down device, but credit where credit is due.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Chris Kellen (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:53am

        Re: Re: whats a kindle

        I do much the same with my Nook Tablet, although I installed the rooted OS on a memory card so that I didn't overwrite the basic software (because frankly, the Nook Reader software is better than anything I've found on Android native).

        I'm always on the lookout for more 3rd party sources... do you mind sharing the ones you use? I tend to use Smashwords whenever possible, although that's mostly for the indie stuff I buy.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • icon
          Zos (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:21am

          Re: Re: Re: whats a kindle

          I love my kindle, but have never actually used the kindle store.

          as far as third party sources, you might google "mobilism forum ebooks" i suspect you'll find an amazing place.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

        • icon
          el_segfaulto (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 12:19pm

          Re: Re: Re: whats a kindle

          Baen has a pretty large collection of SciFi available DRM free. Obviously the Gutenberg Project has what little hasn't been ripped from the Public Domain (yet). From an ethical standpoint, I have zero problem with grabbing electronic versions of books that I already own...so a few have also come from friends willing to share their particular file. If you haven't installed and learned Calibre yet, do so. Not only is it the best manager around, it can also download articles from various sites and send them to your device properly formatted.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

          • icon
            Zos (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 3:38pm

            Re: Re: Re: Re: whats a kindle

            really? i've only used it for converting files to .mobi, i'll have to take a closer look at the thing.

            link to this | view in chronology ]

        • identicon
          A.B., 24 Jan 2013 @ 1:10pm

          Re: Re: Re: whats a kindle

          I believe Kobo may be decent for getting non-indie stuff? Much of its indie stuff will be from Smashwords, but there may be some that is through Kobo's own self-publishing service. Sony ebooks also, I believe, will toggle between Canadian & US pages.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Zakida Paul (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 8:46am

    Who ever decided that regional licensing restrictions in a digital market makes good business sense needs to be sacked.

    These restrictions are the biggest factor driving people to piracy and it is beyond me how there are people who fail to see this. If the licensing industries are to remain relevant, they are going to have to give up a little bit of control. It will benefit everyone.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      :Lobo Santo (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 8:49am

      Re: FTFY

      "Who ever decided that regional licensing restrictions in a digital market makes good business sense needs to be shot/educated."

      -FTFY

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:04am

      Re:

      They do not understand that the Internet is global, and therefore they are looking at a single market.
      Also what happens when someone tries to license a book while on a foreign holiday?
      Can they still access their books if they move to a foreign country because of their job?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      The Real Michael, 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:19am

      Re:

      Region-locking = price-fixing and market control. Despite all the technological advancements, access to content struggles from the same old setbacks.

      I honestly feel that the internet was better in many ways over a decade ago. Sure, broadband speeds were slow, CPUs weren't as powerful and HD storage left something to be desired, but we had something better -- namely, freedom. People could make fansites for their favorite artists, movies, wrestling promotions, video games, etc. and include content without fear of being shut down. We had fun, we shared, discussed, learned, and nobody got hurt. But then the big mean corporates stepped in and ruined it for everybody.

      We need a revolution in culture to placate the old one.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 8:51am

    Yet another reason why I will NEVER buy an E-Book. Publishers can't pull that crap on me and physical copy of a book.

    Plus even if they didn't pull this DRM and region locking crap, you don't know that the kindle format will still be readable in 10 to 20 years.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Samuel Abram (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:12am

      That's why…

      That's why there's Cory Doctorow and Project Gutenberg: Crowdsourcing of new formats to the rescue! And they will def. be DRM-Free!

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Keroberos (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 12:42pm

      Re:

      ...you don't know that the kindle format will still be readable in 10 to 20 years.
      Why wouldn't it be readable? The Mobipocket container format that Kindle e-books are based on has been around 13 years, and the text files in that container are just slightly modified HTML/XHTML/CSS files--the image files are all bog standard. With e-book DRM being trivial to remove, and conversion to another format being so easy (all e-books at their core are HTML/XHTML/CSS based). I highly doubt that any e-book format will be impossible to read in 20 years--if ever.

      The only barrier to readability in 20 years would be availability. Can the end user keep track of a digital file for 20 years? Will the retailer still be around and allow you to re-download after 20 years? These are problems that all digital files have--whether bought from a retailer, downloaded for free, or even self created.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      anonymouse, 24 Jan 2013 @ 12:51pm

      Re:

      Forget drm books, there are many places to get non drm books. Why do people still purchase content from these guys seriously are people that uninformed.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Samuel Abram (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:11am

    This is why I hate DRM

    I basically usually read books either from Authors who don't have DRM and have a CC license (like Cory Doctorow or Colonel Lawrence Lessig) or have passed into the Public Domain (like on Project Gutenberg). Very rarely would I read a book that has DRM.

    Also, I prefer the EPUB format, because I know how to hack and modify that thing. The MOBI format, not so much.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Chris Kellen (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:55am

      Re: This is why I hate DRM

      EPUB is the superior format. I firmly believe this, having worked with both extensively, and wish Amazon would get on board so that we could just get to the MP3 endgame-stage already. This holding out because they control the market thing is so... annoying.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Keroberos (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 1:12pm

        Re: Re: This is why I hate DRM

        Epub may be visually superior to Amazon's previous Kindle format--the new KF8 format is about on par with epub. Many of the features of the epub standard are not mandatory, so support for them is not equal on all the different readers (plus some readers epub implementation is just straight up broken--Adobe, I'm looking at you). Using any of the advanced features of epub can cause display problems on different devices/reader software making epub design a nightmare unless you stick to boring layouts. Kindle has a much smaller hardware/software target--all controlled by Amazon, making it a much easier target to hit.

        And why would Amazon change? They are the dominant e-book retailer, and are in a position that is any retailers wet dream--all their customers are locked into their system. The only reason they would have to change is if they start to lose that dominance--either in the hardware/software or content--to some other retailer. I don't think that is likely to happen any time soon, as their only real competitor (Apple) likes their ecosystem just as locked up as Amazon's.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • icon
          Samuel Abram (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 1:48pm

          Re: Re: Re: This is why I hate DRM

          There is one important distinction between Apple's locked ecosystem and Amazon's locked ecosystem: Apple won't delete a file you downloaded from their iTunes store off your hard drive. Even if they don't carry the product anymore, it's still on your hard drive. I know this because DRM'd works they don't carry anymore are still accessible on my iTunes and iPod Touch. For the record, I never used Apple's iCloud service. While there is a lot (shitloads, even) that Apple does wrong, this is one of those areas that they got right.

          Also, EPUB files work on the Nook, Kino, Sony E-Reader, etc.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:14am

    really, the only sensible thing to do is not eep stuff stored on Amazon Cloud. no company really gives a toss about the customers once it has been paid. what they dont do is look to the future when they could be in the position of getting many less customers because of acting like dicks!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Chris Rhodes (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:34am

    Struggling For Sympathy

    This is what happens when you don't pirate stuff. You'd think people would learn.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      akp (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 11:37am

      Re: Struggling For Sympathy

      Except people keep hoping that if they do pay for stuff, they actually own it. Most people don't even understand the "new industry" model where we just "license" our entertainment and never own anything.

      I'd rather my favorite authors get paid, somehow. The way the **AAs and now the publishing industry go on is that if I don't pay *them*, artists will stop creating. We know that's crap, but I'd usually still rather pay for something I enjoyed enough that I want the artist to keep on doing it.

      What I often do is go ahead and pay (if the price is reasonable), and then go ahead and pirate the same thing so I have the "unlocked" version of whatever it is.

      Add to that, especially with books you really do get what you pay for. The formatting on most books I've "acquired" is atrocious, those I've gotten through the Kindle ecosystem, or storybundle.com or other legit sources have been much nicer. No weird watermarking, no OCR errors. On music and movies, I don't care if the metadata is all messed up, but when I have hundreds of books on my Kindle, I need that metadata to work.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Another AC, 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:37am

    This applies to android apps as well

    You can't use a Canadian credit card with a 'shipping address' in Canada, it must be U.S. based. Why any of this is necessary or even makes sense when purchasing purely digital goods is beyond me.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      cmoss, 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:34am

      Re: This applies to android apps as well

      You can use a bogus US name and address and then send yourself an Amazon gift card from your legitimate Amazon account. Use the gift card balance to purchase your US kindle books.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Ninja (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:39am

    VPN. Problem solved.

    Or for the more open minded.. File sharing. Two problems solved. They don't want my money and I want to avoid spending it.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Arkiel, 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:44am

    This noise

    Hear that? That's the sound of a million people that had no reason to mistrust the market suddenly becoming eager pirates. Here's something you may not know, Mr/Ms marketing fuckwad, advantageous pricing via market segmentation does not work. People interpret that as being cheated, and route around it appropriately.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Rekrul, 24 Jan 2013 @ 12:19pm

      Re: This noise

      Hear that? That's the sound of the people who will make a stink about this getting trampled to death by the millions of others rushing to embrace the Kindle and other locked-down systems...

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    ebilrawkscientist (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:48am

    *blinks*

    Why they always pull this sheet, just when I'm on the verge of purchasing an eReader? I just spent months on the side putting it off because of these very issues, its disgusting and vile.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      akp (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 11:40am

      Re: *blinks*

      The good news is you can still buy an eReader, and get your books (even legit) outside of the Amazon or B&N ecosystem.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      That One Guy (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 12:52pm

      Re: *blinks*

      Just do what I did, buy the reader, and get the ebooks themselves elsewhere.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Jesse (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 9:57am

    Amazon is only useful if I can purchase from the dotcom version.

    The Canadian version never has what I want or the price is unacceptable. It's already bad enough that many sellers are unwilling to ship to Canada (though Alaska/Hawaii is okay?).

    If I am forced to use .ca I will stop using Amazon altogether.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Gregg, 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:02am

    US to CAN price differences

    The real reason it might be happening is that in our retail books stores, US prices are always lower than Canadian prices, by a lot. Even though the Canadian dollar has been on par or higher value than US currency since 2007/8. Amazon see's this and is keeping Canadians to only buying from the Canadian Amazon.ca with inflated prices.

    I will never enter the ebook market until it is fair, equal and more of a free enterprise model. I'm not the only one who feels this way, and really they are forcing people to go to piracy.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Vic, 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:09am

    That explains my adventures when trying to get that book "On Internet Freedom" by Marvin Ammori!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:10am

    One problem with the theory

    The theory that this has to do with the price fixing allegations and the regulatory control of the US Courts makes no sense though. Amazon benefited tremendously from the court case as Apple was the one colluding with the publishers and complaining about Amazon the entire time. Why would Amazon go along with this if this were the case?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Capitalist Lion Tamer (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 11:03am

      Re: One problem with the theory

      I'm not sure if Amazon IS going along with this. Publishers can simply "pull" their books and release them as specific versions for each market. I'm not sure of all the mechanics behind it (or even 100% sure this IS what's happening), but listing one set at one price at .ca and another at .com and limiting users to selecting one or the other based on their "home country" allows the publishers to (theoretically) increase prices to an advantageous level OUTSIDE the US.

      Amazon may not have any control over this as ultimately the publishers control how, when, where and at what price their books are listed.

      Again, there's very little solid evidence that publishers are doing this. But I would imagine that if it was 100% the publishers' fault, there's still be very little publicly-available evidence. It's not like they'd want customers to know they were moving to country-specific catalogs SOLELY to take advantage of pricing flexibility.

      If this is Amazon making this push... it's much more inexplicable. There's very little benefit for the company and much more potential for negative fallout.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 1:52pm

        Re: Re: One problem with the theory

        So you think it may be the publishers using strong arm tactics to get Amazon to do this. Could be. Still one of the things that the publishers screamed loudly about related to the price fixing case was that Amazon was selling their ebooks below cost to get customers. That leads me to believe that either 1. Amazon feels that they have enough market share in those other markets that they can start to move pricing up their without the significant competition to bring the market back down or 2. they are being forced to do this in those markets as a concession to keep the publishers happy enough to continue giving them the books. If it's the latter, we might see them release some sort of leak out that gives us an indication that this is the case. Given the way they stood up to them on the price in the former issue, I can't see Amazon just taking this lying down.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    bshock, 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:11am

    With all due respect...

    If you buy Amazon's DRMed books, you are simply a fool who enjoys pissing away his/her money.

    I've been the happy owner of a Kindle for three years now, I have never purchased a book for it, and I've used it to read almost daily.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Zakida Paul (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:19am

      Re: With all due respect...

      You do realise that Amazon DRM is piss easy to strip and then you can convert the books to whatever format you want, right?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Chris Rhodes (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 12:28pm

        Re: Re: With all due respect...

        I am distrustful of third party software that wants your Amazon login info to remove the DRM from the stuff you've bought there. (Unless you know of another way, in which case I'd be VERY interested to know about it.)

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:16am

    I think you didn't really drive home the real point, which is that you don't really own a kindle book product.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:26am

    The only solution is to kindle your kindle.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Cyber Killer, 24 Jan 2013 @ 10:59am

    Indie FTW

    That's why I only buy non drm books and usually from indie authors (mostly on smashwords but not only). The big publishers ain't getting none of my cash nor my interest.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    timmaguire42 (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 11:48am

    Having reently moved from the US

    To Canada, I can say this has been a big problem affecting nearly all online services. For now, my answer is unblock.ca

    This service routes you through a US IP address so you can watch US Netflix (Netflix Canada is pretty much of a scam) and hulu. I haven't tried it with a kindle, but it's worth looking into.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 12:29pm

    After I heard that the Kindle lost a free book from peoples reading devices I decided right then to not buy one.
    Until the process is an open as buying a paper book I will not buy a kindle or any other reading device or ebook.
    I have a tablet and can read books on it if I wish.
    I also have access to many books in epub and mobi format that I can read on my tablet any time I want to.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Brian Goudge, 24 Jan 2013 @ 1:31pm

    Amazon.ca Kindle

    I was delighted to read that amazon.ca was carrying Kindle; am now very discouraged when I read this article. I'm tired of being forced to pay a different price from that available to Americans, be it books, greeting cards,or whatever
    Bottlom line...no new Kindle for me until Amazon and the publishers get their respective acts together!
    BG

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 1:41pm

    I am Canadian. If I lose a single book, have a limited selection, or artificially inflated prices, I will not be an Amazon customer any more.

    Seriously I actually PAY for books, and now they want to F*** me over? If that's the strategy, then I have an alternative strategy that involves getting books PERMANENTLY for FREE.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    gorehound (profile), 24 Jan 2013 @ 2:59pm

    You guys will think I am a dinosaur but I feel that I am a very smart person.You see I have never and will never buy a Digital Book.
    That being said I do love Books and own around 1500 of them.A huge Collection of Science Fiction Rarities and 1ST Edition World War 2 Eastern Front Books.
    I am Willing my Collection to my Son and I fully Own every Single One to do with whatever I want.I could even Burn them if I felt like it.
    I keep my Books Displayed and people see them when they visit.They have nice Plastic Rare Book Bags and never any Sunlight so the Paper has not Faded.
    Right now it is Appraised Conservatively at $16,500.
    I really love my Books.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Cody Jackson, 24 Jan 2013 @ 4:53pm

    Internationalization

    I just checked KDP to see how my book sales are doing and saw that Amazon had recently added several new locations. Previously, the only country specific sales were Spain, Italy, UK, France, and Germany. Now they have Japan, Canada, et al.

    On the one hand, as an author, it's a pain in the butt to have to look at each location separately to see sales. However, it is interesting to see where the buyers are from; it can help improve "internationalization" of future books.

    I don't know if this will be a good thing or not for authors, but it looks to be a pain in the butt for consumers. I don't understand why (beyond short-sighted publishers) it matters where someone buys a digital book from, especially with VPN services being widely available. It won't stop anyone from going "outside their country" to get what they want.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 24 Jan 2013 @ 6:32pm

    So much for "if you don't like your country's copyright laws, gtfo". They screw you regardless of what country you're in.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    A. Nnoyed (profile), 25 Jan 2013 @ 5:28am

    Amazon Policies

    I wonder if Amazon Management is changing policies to bleed more money out of customers. I am a prime member which means that I am entitled to free two day shipping on any item sold directly by Amazon.com when I purchased my membership.

    Two days ago I attempted to order some low cost merchandise from Amazon (under $10.00). Each item had a flag beside it "ADD ON ITEM". When I added the item to the cart it did not give me an opportunity to go to check out. When I clicked on the ADD ON ITEM flag, a text box appeared indicating that the items were add on items and would include free shipping if I purchase merchandise that costs $25.00 or more. I was not given a way to pay for shipping in order to obtain the merchandise without purchasing other merchandise for $25.00 or more. When I purchased my prime membership one of the features of the membership was free shipping even if the cost of the merchandise was less than $25.00.

    It took me several minutes to find a way to contact Amazon. The customer service representative had to manually enter my order in order to enter it into their system.

    I wonder if the scheme effecting customers moving to Canada, preventing customers from taking books that they purchased to Canada, is another method to squeeze more money out of the customer. The reason I like hard copy books is that the publisher cannot dictate where I can read the book and when traveling, an airline stewardess cannot force me to put my book away during takeoff and landing.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Christa, 28 Jan 2013 @ 12:32am

    annoyed Canadian

    Well I'm a Canadian kindle owner and we have a total of 5 of them for the whole family on my account. woke up Saturday to my daughter trying to buy a book on amazon.com and buying options weren't there just message saying go to amazon.ca

    Called customer service who had no idea what was going on. i had seen the info boxes that you could change to amazon.ca but hadn't heard they were going to force us. was told not to purchase anything else or change to .ca or we would lose all our books which is over 2000. she couldn't change the country though she used to have that option wasn't coming up

    woman did call back 6 hours later to tell me we had been switched to amazon.ca and our books would transfer. to be honest I'm not sure they did because we had so many. my husband did lose his subscriptions which i was told were cancelled the day before.

    however my gift card balance did not transfer!! because I'm in Canada can't sound it on non kindle items they won't ship here. was told a gift card specialist would contact me to resolve gift card balance we now can't spend on kindle books or anything else since they won't ship here.

    got an email today saying its not transferable from amazon.com to amazon.ca. to use it on amazon.com. which again won't ship to Canadian address. no option to refund my credit card which purchased it and is same one used for kindle purchases.

    IF we had been notified we were going to be forced to amazon.ca I could have decided to make sure it was spent before switched, waited and bought amazon.ca card instead or just not purchased it.

    So we were switched without notification, unsure if all books came, subscriptions loathing not just stopped but already paid issues gone from kindle and archive. customer service with no clue what happened and gift card balance we can't spend on anything.

    We love our kindles obviously, we bought one for all 5 family members. similar Canadian readers don't compare. This was handled horribly. We hadn't heard anything about the switch just that little info box that we could purchase from amazon.ca

    at the very least should have notified Canadian users this was going to happen. have customer service know it was, Smooth transfer or refund of gift card balance or notice to spend before switch.

    And personally my family could really have done without those 6 hours of thinking once switched to amazon.ca we were going to lose all of our over 2000 books.

    Christa

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Zach, 23 Feb 2013 @ 11:16am

    Switching to Indigo, a Canadian bookstore

    I like my Kindle. It's nice, but now that electronic copies of books are more expensive than paperbacks in my local bookstore, Indigo I have no choice but to switch back to paper.

    I hope this doesn't work out for Amazon quite the way they were expecting. I know I'm only one customer, but I buy a lot of books, and I'm sure I'm not alone. Just seems like a dumb move and a waste of the potential that is available with these technological advancements.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    rimeslenna (profile), 13 Sep 2013 @ 12:17am

    Amazon is separating its customer to their local domains, by this way it will be lot easier to the company. I was trying to purchase hotel safes from the amazon for my hotel security purpose but was denied due to my registration in .com domain. It was kind of annoying but what to do, had to register again in the .ca domain for my purchase.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Bill, 28 Apr 2014 @ 8:04pm

    US and Canadian Kindle PaperWhite

    I have a US and Canadian Kindles and accounts can I transfer books between these two accounts.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Jun 2014 @ 5:32am

    I am living in Mexico and am being forced by Amazon to use the kindle store here at inflated prices and much smaller selection of books. Most are in Spanish which I do not want to read
    . Also I cannot get access to free books or books on special.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Donald Cameron, 14 Mar 2015 @ 8:10pm

    Canada's parochial distribution laws.

    The same happened to Pandora.
    The same happened with Canadian Satellite service.
    The same happened with cable blackouts of home games.
    The criminalizing of digital tape players.
    There is one thing that no country can compete against.
    The spread of English internationally through the internet communication.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    mfon, 22 Mar 2015 @ 2:25pm

    Set Goals Like A Tiger: Personal & Spiritual Guidance To Keep You On Track

    Set Goals Like A Tiger: Personal & Spiritual Guidance To Keep You On Track} that sets your mind unto a productive approach on how to manage and set an achievers target.This book will take your mind in-dept bringing out solutions and issues that has killed the better part of you. Everyone has his or her own unique approach to life. Its just a matter of you discovering it at the quickest possible time because time waits for no one.

    Book Link

    US: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00TTB3EP4
    UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00TTB3EP4
    CA: http://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B00TTB3EP4
    AU: http://www.amazon.com.au/gp/product/B00TTB3EP4


    Blog Link

    http://insoutcentre.blogspot.com

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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