Amazon’s Kindle support cutoff raises a fundamental question: what is the difference between digital ownership vs license? The answer might surprise you.
Digital Ownership vs License: The Key Difference
When you buy a physical book, you own it. You can lend it, sell it, or keep it forever.
When you buy a Kindle book, you buy a license to read it. Amazon retains control.
What This Means for Kindle Users
In the digital ownership vs license debate, Amazon wins. The company can:
- Remove books from your device remotely
- End support for old devices
- Block access if your account is closed
You never truly own the file.
The Fine Print
Amazon’s Terms of Service state: “Kindle Content is licensed, not sold.” That is the heart of digital ownership vs license.
What You Can Do
- Remove DRM (where legal) for personal backup
- Download books to your computer before support ends
- Buy from DRM-free stores like eBooks.com or Baen
The Bottom Line
Understanding digital ownership vs license helps you make informed choices. If ownership matters, buy physical books or DRM-free ebooks.

