 Source: Cryptogon
Source: CryptogonNever mind the fact that there are no used e-book stores, check this out!
Via: Which?:
As it stands, the rights of iTunes and Amazon customers look 
pretty shaky when it comes to passing on downloads. If you buy a music 
track from a digital store, you’re essentially buying a licence to play 
that track – a licence granted to you only, which isn’t transferable 
upon death.
Legally you’re essentially just renting tracks – you don’t actually 
own them, as Matthew Strain of law firm Strain-Keville pointed out to us
 in the latest issue of Which? Computing:
‘We do not “own” what we purchase on iTunes, we only have the right to use it. The right to the “product” is therefore limited and passing it on to someone else is not likely to be accepted by Apple.’
The issue extends to the rapidly-growing ebooks market as well – Amazon’s Kindle licence explicitly forbids you from passing on your downloaded ebooks:
‘We do not “own” what we purchase on iTunes, we only have the right to use it. The right to the “product” is therefore limited and passing it on to someone else is not likely to be accepted by Apple.’
The issue extends to the rapidly-growing ebooks market as well – Amazon’s Kindle licence explicitly forbids you from passing on your downloaded ebooks:
    ‘Unless specifically indicated otherwise, you may not 
sublicence or otherwise assign any rights to the digital content or any 
portion of it to a third party.’
