At least if you purchased from them you "will receive a refund for every e-book bought."
Of course, if you convert your ebooks into a non-drm format, you're technically in violation of the law
, but it's done thousands of time each day.
I was intrigued by further comments in the article on how "DRM erodes personal property rights and that the scope extends beyond digital media." Imagine being on the road and your car simply stopped because someone pulled the software rights that keep your car engine running?
Big implications that need to be looked into by someones, but I fear it will bog down for years while someones argue over who knows what.