On February 26th, Kindle customers will lose the ability to download eBook purchases directly to their PC. If you want to switch to a rival eReader brand in the future, I suggest that you use the soon-to-be discontinued “Download and Transfer via USB” feature to archive your Kindle library.
The “Download & Transfer via USB” feature predates Wi-Fi Kindles. It initially served as an alternative to Kindle’s cellular downloads feature—if you didn’t have cellular service, you could just download the books to your PC from a web browser, plug a USB cable into your Kindle, and drag-and-drop the eBooks into your Kindle’s file system.
Amazon hasn’t explained why it’s getting rid of this functionality. However, I suspect that the company is trying to keep longtime customers locked into the Kindle platform. Competing eReader brands like Kobo and BOOX have exploded in popularity over the last few years, and although these rival platforms support the Kindle app, there are a lot of people who hate the Kindle app. Longtime Kindle customers who make the switch to a rival brand often use Amazon’s legacy “Download & Transfer via USB” feature to grab their old Kindle purchases, strip away the DRM, and convert the files to an open format like EPUB. That way, they can open the books in whatever reader app they like.
This move may also force some old-school Kindle users to upgrade their hardware, as book downloads will now require a Kindle with Wi-Fi connectivity. Though, admittedly, every Kindle model introduced after 2011 supports Wi-Fi, and I don’t think we have too many Kindle DX users in the audience.
Of course, I’m obliged to mention piracy. The “Download & Transfer via USB” feature makes it easy to remove DRM from Kindle eBooks, and if you want to illegally distribute copyrighted content, you gotta remove the DRM first. Realistically, 99% of people who remove the DRM from their Kindle purchases are doing it for personal use, which is legal in most jurisdictions. But as book publishers and authors grow more vocal about piracy (and as billion-dollar companies like Meta inflame the problem by pirating books to train AI) Amazon may feel pressured to lock things down.
![A kobo on the left side and a kindle on the right side under a wooden table.](https://static1.howtogeekimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/a-kobo-on-the-left-side-and-a-kindle-on-the-right-side-under-a-wooden-table.jpg)
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I honestly doubt that the death of “Download & Transfer via USB” will have any real impact on piracy. It will primarily affect people who are trying to switch from Kindle to a rival platform. The irony is that affected customers may use piracy to rebuild their digital library after switching to a different brand of eReader, as Amazon is making it much harder to download and modify old eBook purchases in a legal manner.
For the record, I’ve reached out to Amazon for a comment. I’ll update this article if the company responds.
If you want to download old Kindle eBook purchases to your PC or Mac, simply visit the Manage Your Content and Devices page on Amazon, press the “More Actions” button next to an eBook, and select “Download & Transfer via USB.” This feature will stop working on February 26th, so do it while you still can.
Source: Amazon via Reddit