On Thursday, some links to the notorious shadow library Library Genesis (Libgen) couldn’t be reached after a US district court judge, Colleen McMahon, ordered what TorrentFreak called “one of the broadest anti-piracy injunctions” ever issued by a US court.

In her order, McMahon sided with textbook publishers who accused Libgen of willful copyright infringement after Libgen completely ignored their complaint.

To compensate rightsholders, McMahon ordered Libgen to pay $30 million, but because nobody knows who runs the shadow library, it seems unlikely that publishers will be paid any time soon, if ever.

  • @RoidingOldMan@lemmy.world
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    86 hours ago

    Only $30 million? For the amount of content and the convenience, Libgen seems to getting charged pennies on the dollar here. Imagine if the government could make a free online library of that quality for only $30 million, it would be a fantastic investment.

    • @GCanuck@lemmy.world
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      719 hours ago

      Sure. But the folks who put the knowledge in a digestible format should be rewarded for their efforts.

      • @Zementid@feddit.nl
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        96 hours ago

        Publishers don’t do this fyi… they only rake in money and give nothing on the authors. They are the real pirates here.

      • @BallsandBayonets
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        67 hours ago

        With Universal Healthcare and a Universal Basic Income, no one would need to be “rewarded” for doing things that they find interesting, entertaining, or do simply for the sake of enriching society.

      • I’d happily pay $20-40ish for a quality textbook. I have many times before. It’s when they want to charge $300 and give almost nothing to the authors that I have a problem with. Extra scummy when they make a new edition that’s just barely different enough you can’t use it for class because the practice problems don’t match or give you one time use online codes that render it worthless for resale.

      • @GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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        312 hours ago

        I would ask if you’re fine with books becoming subscription based commodities.

        I would hope your answer is no.

        We both know you don’t read past the headlines though, so your opinion on this matter is as limited as your understanding of the topic.

        I agree, creators should be paid, but libraries should be a protected branch of society. one day when capitalism forces a subscription pattern to books and locks knowledge behind paywalls, those libraries will be the only salvation for the disenfranchised masses.

          • @GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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            57 hours ago

            I don’t think you grasped the danger in a subscription based publishing model.

            you don’t get to read the book unless you pay the monthly fee. you stop paying, you stop reading.

            you don’t lend the book, you don’t borrow the book, you don’t copy the book…because there is no book.

            so how do the disenfranchised or poor gain access to knowledge outside their means? today, there are libraries. what happens if all those physical books are replaced with digital? worse yet, what happens when publishers con libraries with digital media? (you can’t fool the librarians, but any dumbass politician will eat a shit pie for optics).

            point is, there is permanence in physical media that makes ownership crystal clear. our society is not ready for a digital era, and if we prematurely enter it without appropriate laws and guidance in place, we will only be encouraging a plutocracy to form, one of which we can already clearly see forming today.

            • @buzz86us@lemmy.world
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              17 hours ago

              Except literally nobody keeps their old textbooks they are by nature disposable, and not printing them is a massive win for the environment.

      • @exanime@lemmy.world
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        112 hours ago

        unless you have a product that needs to feed off someone else’s labour to be somewhat useful, then you can use it for free legally without compensating anyonee

  • barnaclebutt
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    971 day ago

    Sometimes there’s a positive story that just makes your day. I bet those lawyers were expensive!

    • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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      721 day ago

      The index is distributed. The files are hosted in multiple places. Historically, some of the storage spots have been compromised web servers. There are copies in ipfs.

      I get the feeling it’s maintained by a collective. No idea how they coordinate content acquisition or update indexes. It’s pretty well updated.

      • @werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        Yes. I am Look Skee Wacker, and I ride the Digital Millennium Copyright Act Falcon. Sure it’s kinda small and feathery but chewy and I love to ride it to new adventures! 😉

        Is the dead falcon smell normal for falcons? Why doesn’t it fly when we jump on it… repeatedly? Is all the red stuff supposed to be inside of it? How do we put it all inside? It’s at lot. Well, it’s not a lot, it’s a falcon. I’m just referring to all the guts outside surrounding it.

      • @AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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        321 day ago

        I cannot count the times that I have gone through the legitimate path to read a paper, by clicking “AcCeS tHiS pApEr ThRoUgH yOuR iNsTItUtIoN” and I log in through my university, faffing with 2FA, only to be told “nah, you don’t have access”. I just go straight to scihub nowadays.

        • @antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1624 hours ago

          Hell, a lot of the time I just go directly to Sci-Hub / Anna’s Archive because it’s literally faster than searching for my university and logging in.