<p>My bio book that I have to buy next semester is 140 new, 100 used. I just bought mine from ebay for 55 bucks. I'm using PayPal, so I'm not that worried. Good deal.</p>
<p>Thats some funny ****... the way you think, I mean. I hope you enjoy paying 200 dollars for a textbook that disapears in a year, because thats what you will be forced to do. You have no idea about how these publishing companies work, and how they can get their money without a problem.</p>
<p>People would be incredibly outraged if publishers used disappearing ink. The very idea is absurd. I usually go back to my old textbooks, and check up on some information that I need to review. Having disappearing ink goes against the very foundations of learning. It's a very malicious, consumerist, profit-taking action that would **** off a bunch of academics. How could you purposely design a book to disappear? You think the authors would like it that their work is being erased? Erasing knoweldge and information is the stupidest thing I have ever heard, and publishers would never do such a thing. If they did, I'd be sure to participate in the digital copying of books so that everyone could have it for free.</p>
<p>They are very close to doing it. The used book industry is bad for publishers. And that digital copying would be illegal, anyone cought doing it will be slammed with huge fines, and possible jail time.</p>