The Internet has killed CDs and newspapers… but not books

The Internet has killed CDs and newspapers… but not books

Given what digital media options have done to CDs and newspapers, you probably assumed that the rise of eReaders such as Kindle and Nook would be doing the same thing to printed books… but you’d be wrong. Per The Guardian, a new survey of people between the ages of 16 to 24 shows that 62% of young adults prefer reading printed books over eBooks.

The survey, which was conducted by youth marketing research firm Voxburner, found that many young people think printed books deliver more value than eBooks and that they have more of an emotional attachment to printed books than eBooks. Voxburner’s Luke Mitchell tells The Guardian that, unlike CDs or newspapers, “books are status symbols” that people use to show off their reading tastes. eReaders, on the other hand, don’t give young people the same intellectual bragging rights.

“You can’t really see what someone has read on their Kindle,” explains Mitchell.

More from BGR: Google wants employees using Macs, not Windows or its own Chromebooks

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Related stories

Amazon continues shoveling dirt on Barnes & Noble's grave

New Kindle Paperwhite to reportedly launch in early 2014

Amazon will now deliver packages on Sundays