Gotta side with Ernest Miller and TeleRead here. Seems as if eReader.com thinks that there's one born every minute:
In a move designed to give schools an affordable way to use eBook technology, eReader.com and Lightning Source Inc. developed The Classics Collection CD, a comprehensive collection of 500 titles that includes "The Red Badge of Courage," by Stephen Crane, "Little Women," by Louisa May Alcott, "Night and Day," by Virginia Woolf, the works of William Shakespeare, and other books commonly found on middle and high school reading lists.
And here's the bargain:
Two purchasing options are available. The Standard Edition is a collection of 250 titles for $995.00; and The Gold Edition adds an additional 250 titles to the collection for a total of 500 titles for $1,495.00.
Here's my question. If those works have DRM, is it legal to break the DRM since they are not/should not be copyrightable for merely being distributed in an electronic format. The relevant section of Title 17 states:
No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.



Intellectual Property
But, Charlie, we have to protect these authors' intellectual property...Or, somebody's intellectual property...Or..Protect...Hey, swindlers have to earn a living too!!
Time to send emails
Someone needs to let the NASSP know about Project Gutenberg. MLA and the NCTE need to get on the boat, too. These people are vultures.