In a shocking move that cements Amazon’s control over digital books, the tech giant is gutting Kindle book ownership even further in February 2025. If you thought you owned the Kindle books you paid for, think again. Amazon is set to eliminate the “Download & Transfer via USB” feature, a critical function for users who want to maintain local copies of their books. Instead, Amazon is forcing readers into its ecosystem, where their access to books is entirely at the company’s mercy.
What’s Changing in February 2025?
Amazon is making two significant anti-consumer changes:
- Eliminating Local Backups: Starting February 26, 2025, Kindle users will no longer be able to download books to their computer and transfer them via USB to their e-readers. This means no more offline backups, no more DRM stripping for true ownership, and no more control over the books you bought. Instead, Amazon will dictate how and when you can access your own library, requiring Wi-Fi for all transfers.
- Killing Kindle Vella: The company is also shutting down its Kindle Vella platform, its failed attempt at serialized storytelling. While this affects a smaller group of readers and writers, it highlights Amazon’s lack of commitment to platforms that don’t immediately serve its bottom line.
How to Download and Backup Kindle Books Before the Change
If you want to preserve your access to your Kindle books before Amazon removes the download feature, follow these steps:
- Go to Your Amazon Content Library: Log in to your Amazon account and navigate to “Manage Your Content and Devices.”
- Select the Books You Want to Keep: Find the Kindle books you have purchased and select them.
- Download to Your Computer: Click the “Download & Transfer via USB” option. Choose your registered Kindle device to initiate the download.
- Save Files Securely: Store the downloaded files in a secure location on your computer or external storage.
- Strip DRM (If Needed): Use DRM removal tools like Calibre with the appropriate plugins to ensure you have full access to your books even if Amazon revokes them.
- Transfer to Alternative Devices: Convert and move the files to open-source e-readers like Kobo or Onyx Boox to maintain long-term control.
Why This Matters: You Don’t Own Your Kindle Books
This move reinforces the ugly truth about Kindle purchases: you’re not buying books—you’re renting them under Amazon’s terms. If Amazon ever decides to revoke access, change its DRM policies, or shut down a service, your entire digital library is at risk. And now, by removing USB transfers, Amazon is ensuring that no reader can create an independent archive of their books.
The Dangers of Amazon’s Control Over Digital Books
- No Offline Backups: Without USB transfer, if Amazon removes a book from your library (which it has done before), there’s no way to keep a local copy.
- DRM Lock-in: Digital Rights Management (DRM) already prevents users from freely transferring books between devices. Now, without USB transfers, removing DRM for fair-use purposes will become even harder.
- Amazon’s Kill Switch: Amazon has remotely deleted purchased books from customers’ devices in the past. With all books now dependent on Amazon’s cloud, your library could disappear overnight.
- Monopoly Power: This move makes it even harder for readers to break free from Amazon’s walled garden. It’s a clear step toward total corporate control over digital literature.
How Readers Can Fight Back
- Stop Buying Kindle Books: Support independent ebook retailers like Kobo, Smashwords, or Bookshop.org, which allow for real ownership of your purchases.
- Use Open Formats: Purchase books in DRM-free formats like EPUB or PDF instead of Amazon’s locked-down AZW format.
- Consider Alternative E-Readers: Devices like the Kobo Clara or Onyx Boox offer more flexibility and don’t tie you to Amazon’s restrictive policies.
- Speak Out: Public backlash has forced tech companies to reverse anti-consumer decisions before. Demand that Amazon reinstate local download options.
Amazon’s Endgame: Total Control Over Books
Amazon has built its Kindle empire on the illusion of ownership. With this latest move, the company is showing its hand—forcing users into a closed system where they have zero control over their books. If readers don’t push back now, the future of digital reading will be nothing more than a glorified rental service dictated by corporate greed.
It’s time to reclaim digital book ownership before Amazon erases it entirely.