The digital revolution offers an extraordinary gift to humanity: unfettered access to all published content. But at what cost? Does the erosion of copyright mean the end of writers? And what does the death of the book mean for the way we learn? "We co-evolve with our tools. Certainly the book has probably changed us more than any other tool", Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon.com, argues. So what does it mean when our most important tool for the last 500 years disappears? The worry is that a future without books may be a dark one. "Our children I think are lurching from one entertaining piece of information to the next; they aren't learning how to think." The digital shift has created angry confrontations across the publishing industry, as Amazon and traditional publishers engage in a bitter struggle. Scott Turow, President of the Authors Guild, claims Amazon are intentionally destroying physical bookstores and therefore harming authors. "If you destroy the physical bookstore by allowing predatory pricing it's going to be much harder for new authors to get a foothold." Amazon take a very different view: "We have made it easier for people to find that hard to find books, so it has increased the diversity of availability". But as the argument rages over changes in the industry the real looming question is whether the problems of the publishing industry are because of technology or because people just don't read books anymore. "I think there has been a shift over the last 20 years away from long form reading towards short form reading", Jeff Bezos says. According to one student, for the next generation it has become all about instant rather than deep information. "I Google the answer, I am not sitting there reading the little details."