Amazon’s new blog publishing program has a major flaw: it lets anyone steal other people’s blogs and charge readers for them. Yesterday, Amazon opened up the ability to publish a blog on the Kindle to anyone who sets up an account. Today, anyone can claim a blog even if it is not theirs, charge a subscription fee for it, and collect the proceeds. In fact, somebody already did just this with TechCrunch. If you search for “TechCrunch” in the Kindle store, the top result is our official blog for the Kindle, which you can subscribe to for $1.99 a month. Right under it is another official-looking TechCrunch blog , which in fact serves up our feed and also costs $1.99, but we don’t see a cent of that money. The second Kindle blog was created by Josh Fraser, the co-founder of EventVue , who notified us and Amazon immediately and offered to give it back to us. He created it just to see if he could and was flabbergasted to discover there is no verification process to ensure people actually own the blogs they are claiming. As Fraser points out: Not only does this enable me to get the revenue share for a blog I don’t write, I can also change the feed to post whatever I want to Kindle subscribers under the TechCrunch brand. Not quite believing this could be so easy, I decided to create my own account on the Kindle Publishing for Blogs Beta and went through

See the original post here:
How The Kindle Now Lets You Steal This Blog



Gregory



May 29, 2009
hey this is a very interesting article!