Have you ever tried a "free downloader" that ended up being a total scam? Tell us about it in the comments!
Do you have a PDF or EPUB that you created (a thesis, a family cookbook, a client report)? You can upload it to Scribd as a private document. Then, and only then, you can download your own original file back out anytime. This doesn’t work for other people’s books, but it’s great for cloud backup.
If you are a paying member, just use the official Everand app for iOS or Android. You can download unlimited titles to your device. Yes, you have to read them in their app, but you don't need Wi-Fi on a plane. It’s seamless.
Let’s be real. Authors get paid by Scribd based on how many pages you read. When you use a downloader to rip a file and cancel your subscription, the author gets $0 for that work.
You’ve finally found that perfect 400-page historical biography or the in-depth financial report you need for work. It’s sitting right there on Scribd (now known as Everand). But then you hit the wall: the dreaded "Download for Offline" button only works inside the app.
Let’s rip the band-aid off. There is no magical, free, one-click tool that rips DRM-protected content from Scribd perfectly.
So, you type the magic words into Google: