Earlier in the summer Amazon caused a stink when they remotely deleted the digital copies of George Orwell books from customers' Kindle devices. The company apologized for the incident back in July, and is now offering to restore the books to affected customers' Kindles or offer a $30 compensation. While that's great, it's still a bit unnerving that companies create products that can be remotely manipulated to modify the device's data without user consent.
The troubles began when the novels were added to the Kindle’s online store by an outside company that did not have rights to them. After the rights holder alerted Amazon, it removed the unauthorized versions from its systems and from customers’ devices, distributing refunds.
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