Submitted by whydoesyourbedsmell t3_10j604u in books
Hi all! Very sorry to the mods if this question is against rules, obviously take it down if that's the case. Sorry for phone formatting. I thought I would ask here as all my in person friends are pro piracy gamers, rather then impartial book people.
So. In recent years I have encountered an issue where second hand, or older books will mess with my eyesight. I don't know the reason is and everytime I book an optometrist something pops up on that day. It's not TOO bad as I have to be reading a book of at least 2 years of age for over an hour and a half before it's an issue. I however am really bad at restraining myself to only an hour of book time. fuzzy vision until I both shower and sleep is really inconvenient (and makes reading harder)!
I have been mediating this by buying new instead of second hand books (rip the budget). I however have received a number of second hand books for Christmas. As well as some op shop finds and some old stuff I'm suddenly in the mood for now that I can't read them.
So, is it ethical to pirate the books I already own so I can read them on my phone?
I would not be sharing or distributing the pirated books as I just want personal use of them. It would not effect book sales as it would just be books I already have. It would however mean more people total are pirating books when I've been under the impression overall that that's bad.
What is your, the book lovers community's opinion on this kind of piracy?
Xan_Winner t1_j5kj2cl wrote
Until you can get your eyes checked out (and you should, that could be signs of various health issues!), you could stick to reading stuff online that's legally free.
https://www.gutenberg.org/ At Gutenberg you can read thousands of classics for free - legally, because they're so old they're out of copyright or were written before modern copyright laws.
On Amazon, many authors offer books for free for exposure, you could sort by price and download a couple dozen free books to read.