How to move kindle e-books to an open source reader?
from aim4harmony@lemmy.world to privacy@lemmy.ml on 17 Jun 21:26
https://lemmy.world/post/48298318

Hi, everyone. đź‘‹

I’d like to move a few of my books from Amazon kindle app to an open source reader before closing the Amazon account. Preferably, I’d like moving to a European -based servive.

Curious about what my options would be? What is the procedure like? 🤷‍♂️

#privacy

threaded - newest

thejoker954@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 21:38 next collapse

It’s been a while since I had to convert Kindle books, but the last time I did - Calibre was the way to go.

It’s a complete collection manager too so you can edit metadata, cover art, format and so much more.

It’s definitely intimidating when starting out, but well worth it.

Snailpope@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 21:41 next collapse

youtu.be/5CIFbUIKwDY?is=CBTmS7PWF5SUh7Qh

Super easy

aim4harmony@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 22:00 collapse

Thanks. Would this work on Linux, too?

Snailpope@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 22:07 collapse

Not sure, don’t see why not. I’m not smart enough to use Linux

AHemlocksLie@lemmy.zip on 18 Jun 20:51 collapse

Nah, you don’t need to be all that smart. You just gotta be willing to spend time learning. It’s not even all that difficult as long as you don’t get too hung up on the old Windows or Mac way of doing things. There are some great beginner friendly distros these days, and they tend to work pretty well without too many issues for most people. If you do have issues, there are chats, typically on IRC, where you can ask for help, and google can go a long way if you’re decent with it.

Snailpope@lemmy.world on 18 Jun 22:22 collapse

Right on, I might try a dual boot on my laptop and give it a try

AHemlocksLie@lemmy.zip on 19 Jun 08:40 collapse

Dual booting is definitely a good way to start. If you lack hard drive space or want to test out distros before picking one to settle on for a while, many are capable of booting off a live CD or flash drive without installation. You might not be able to settle in quite as well without installing, but for quick tests and comparisons, it can be handy, and it makes no change at all to your PC until you commit to installing it properly.

aim4harmony@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 21:57 collapse

Thank you. I have heard about Calibre before and got a bit spooked by the complexity of the process. 🤭

N0t_5ure@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 22:20 next collapse

If you want to make it easy, just go to libgen.li, download the books without DRM and it’s off to the races…

voxel@feddit.org on 17 Jun 22:39 collapse

Likely illegal (depending on where the post author lives).

aim4harmony@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 22:42 collapse

I live in the EU country and would prefer a legal way to save my purchased books.

adespoton@lemmy.ca on 18 Jun 03:52 next collapse

These days you could also fire up the book in the kindle app and tell an AI to OCR each page, saving the result in ePub format.

mech@feddit.org on 18 Jun 05:27 next collapse

I ducking hate today’s tech.

guymontag@lemmy.ml on 18 Jun 13:41 collapse

I wonder if we could jailbreak Amazon’s shitty ai to do it. If they gave us the text themselves then it’s not piracy. What a revelation!

gnuthing@lemmygrad.ml on 19 Jun 00:00 collapse

Did you purchase a book or a license?

SocialistVibes01@lemmy.ml on 18 Jun 07:14 collapse

If Calibre is complex then just desist.

RodgeGrabTheCat@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jun 21:59 next collapse

You need to remove the DRM from the books. I’ve heard Caliber can do this.

TheTechyHobbit@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jun 23:38 collapse

I second Calibre.

I used to know of a plugin, years ago, that would remove all DRM from ebooks at the time of import into Calibre

gruhuken@slrpnk.net on 18 Jun 23:25 collapse

DeDRM!

gary_host_laptop@lemmy.ml on 17 Jun 22:02 next collapse

if you want a reader to access your files, grimmory is the way to go, if you need to edit metadata before doing that or you want to import them to your ereader use calibre if you dont care about them looking nice you can just dump your files in the ereader tho), if you want to automate pirating them, there isn’t a very good alternative to something like radarr, but ive been playing with bindery. these are selfhosted, there’s also readest for desktop/mobile.

leadore@lemmy.world on 18 Jun 01:37 next collapse

There’s a looooong thread on mobileread forums about how to do this. Amazon changed their ebook format a year or two ago to make it harder to remove the DRM, but someone usually comes up with a new way to do it every time Amazon tries to foil them.

This is the thread I have bookmarked – I haven’t kept up with it all since I quit Kindle back when they removed the “download & transfer” option to let us save our own purchased property. But I think their newest format has been figured out now, so if it’s possible to do, the instructions should be in that thread.

lsjw96kxs@sh.itjust.works on 18 Jun 04:28 next collapse

You can use dedrm plugin in calibre to remove the DRM on your ebooks. You just need to download them on your computer, like using an old version of kindle.

If you want to buy more recent ebooks, as someone else said, the DRM cannot be removed now, so you should download them from kobo if you want to still be able to download and remove DRM.

unskilled5117@feddit.org on 18 Jun 05:25 next collapse

This is the most uptodate option i know of, using DeDrm/noDrm and Calibre, havent tested it myself though.

SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 18 Jun 08:10 next collapse

If they’re popular, chances are they’re easily downloadable TBH

racoon@lemmy.ml on 18 Jun 11:46 collapse

Yeah Anna might have them archived from the A to the Z-library

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 Jun 12:14 collapse

Any update on how to get to Anna? I have three links at this point. None seem to work.

SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 18 Jun 12:28 collapse

Hot tip is to check the wikipedia page for the latest

AHemlocksLie@lemmy.zip on 18 Jun 09:37 next collapse

What open source reader are you using? I’d love an open source device to replace my Kobo, but the only option I ever found when I looked was basically to use an Android app, and that’s not really what I hoped for.

spy@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 Jun 11:43 collapse

(Not OP)

I think Kobo is not too closed, is it? Not saying it’s open source, but not hard to install KoReader or other stuff it may support.

I have a PocketBook reader, more specifically a pocketbook touch hd 3.

When plugged into a pc the thing seems open source but I am not sure if everything it runs is visible there. Installing KoReader on by device was just a matter of copying 2 folders to specific places in the existing hierarchy, and not a single file replaced a previously existing one.

This is an older device, I hope newer ones are still as open as this one seems to be.

I don’t expect to need to buy another e-reader anytime soon but Kobo would be on my radar if I would.

What is wrong with yours?

AHemlocksLie@lemmy.zip on 18 Jun 16:21 next collapse

I’d just prefer something genuinely open. I can and did put KOReader on my Kobo, but it still runs its own proprietary firmware or OS or whatever. That’s probably based on or built on top of something open like a Linux kernel, but a proprietary layer still sits on top

I’ve been considering getting… I think it’s the Pine Note? It’s from Pine64 and is supposed to be a tablet with an e-ink display, but last I checked on it a year or two ago, software and driver support was still not quite there. It’s all open hardware, though, so it’s just a matter of the community getting it up to speed. Probably about time I look back into it, but my Kobo isn’t that old, so I kinda hate to spend so much replacing it.

localghost@lemmy.today on 18 Jun 18:59 collapse

I absolutely adore my Kobo. I run calibre and calibre web to manage everything for it and it’s been flawless for me for a couple years now.

lemmyng@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 Jun 18:29 next collapse

kindlemodding.org/jailbreaking/index.html

EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world on 18 Jun 23:44 collapse

Supposedly you can’t use Calibre to remove DRM from Kindle E-books anymore since Amazon no longer lets you download the raw files to a computer. The only workaround I’m aware of requires you have a kindle device.

Of course you could find an alternative form of ebook acquisition