Millions of Amazon Kindle devices are going to stop working within weeks in what one book-lover has called a ‘nightmare’.
The tech giant informed Kindle lovers in an email last week stating that Amazon Kindle and Kindle Fire devices released during or before 2012 will no longer be supported from May 20.
This means that anyone using the affected devices, which rely on online services, will no longer be able to download new e-books, effectively ‘bricking’ the devices.
Which Amazon Kindles are becoming unusable?
Experts estimate this move, which comes after Amazon dropped support for its Fire TV Blaster, will impact around two million devices, but which?
- Kindle 1st Generation (2007)
- Kindle DX and DX Graphite (2009 and 2010)
- Kindle Keyboard (2010)
- Kindle 4 (2011)
- Kindle Touch (2011)
- Kindle 5 (2012)
- Kindle Paperwhite 1st Generation (2012)
- Kindle Fire 1st Gen (2011)
- Kindle Fire 2nd Gen (2012)
- Kindle Fire HD 7 (2012)
- Kindle Fire HD 8.9 (2012)
What can I no longer do on these Kindles?
Amazon says that users will still be able to flip through already downloaded ebooks and their Kindle Library will remain accessible on the smartphone app and the Kindle website.
But it warned that deregistering or performing a factory reset on the older Kindles will make them unusable, and users will no longer be able to reregister it or use the device in any way.
On Kindle Fire devices, users will no longer be able to purchase or download content.
All other services will remain operational.
In its recently updated support page, Amazon also confirmed that the gadget’s ‘Send to Kindle’ feature will no longer work, and users will be forced to use a USB cable to transfer any documents to e-readers.
Amazon should have already emailed you if you own one of these bricks-to-be, but you can use this page to find out which model you have.
To soften the blow, Amazon is offering longtime users a promotional code for 20% of some Kindle devices, as well as book credits if they purchase a new device before June 20.
Tech expert Paolo Pescatore says that as much as Amazon’s decision is ‘frustrating’ for users, stopping support for older models makes sense from a security perspective.
What has Amazon said?
An Amazon spokesperson told Metro: ‘Starting May 20, 2026, customers using Kindle and Kindle Fire devices released in 2012 and earlier will no longer be able to purchase, borrow, or download new content via the Kindle store.
‘These models have been supported for at least 14 years – some as long as 18 years – but technology has come a long way in that time, and these devices will no longer be supported moving forward.’
‘The challenge is that these devices were built for a different era and are not equipped to run newer, more data-hungry services and features,’ he tells Metro.
‘On top of that, supporting ageing hardware becomes harder as older chipsets, components and software stacks lose broader industry support.’
Ugo Vallauri, co-director of the Restart Project, which teaches people how to refurbish their old tech, says Amazon will brick two million devices.
Vallauri tells Metro that while this will only impact 3% of users, it’s the latest example of ‘software obsolescence’, leading to 624 tons of e-waste.
‘We’ve seen it all before,’ he says.
‘Manufacturers of all kinds of products.
‘Amazon claims that new models provide better performance when deciding to stop supporting products they’ve already sold to consumers.
However, that’s hardly a good reason for soft-bricking millions of still functioning devices.’
‘By offering a discount to buy a new device, Amazon is implicitly inviting people to upgrade and recycle their existing, functioning device.’
‘I made the intentional choice not to trust Amazon’
Book-lovers have criticised the move.
Among them is Daria Ershova, a PR worker in Belgrade, Serbia, who has owned a Kindle since 2017.
Her mum, meanwhile, has been reading books on the device for 13 years.
‘What frustrates me most is the logic of it,’ Daria, 24, tells Metro.
‘If a device works perfectly fine, cutting off its access to new content is a bad business decision.
‘And it’s one that punishes exactly the kind of customer Amazon should want to keep: people who’ve been in their ecosystem for a decade.’
Some social media users fear that the move was to force more people to use updated Kindle models that display adverts.
Amazon’s announcement has left people who own e-readers not produced by the American corporation worried that their devices could be next.
One social media user told Metro that he bought an e-device by the Canadian company Kobo for this very reason.
‘I am a bit worried that I’ll eventually need to replace my Kobo and would rather refurbish it,’ he says.
‘I’d be more worried if I had a Kindle but I made the intentional choice not to trust Amazon.’
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
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Source: This article was originally published by Metro UK
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