Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Probably some encoding issue, or OCR. I've seen this in text on adslop sites that have novels on HTML, but not usually on the books I actually download (often epubs of cookbooks or other practical non-fiction somebody wants, since the PDFs are slow on slow tablets).I do apprec?ate people archiving books so I don?t have to give money to faggots that don?t deserve it, but do half the peop?e who upload on libgen even check the shit they?re uploading? I swear ev?ry fucking sentence has some kind of err?r, which is easy to let your mind correct while you?re reading, but it a?ds up.
Germany's voluntary pirate site blocking scheme was overhauled this year, adding proper judicial oversight. In recent weeks, the first court orders were signed, resulting in blockades of shadow library Anna's Archive and gaming portal RPG Only. These blockades were announced weeks after they were first implemented, which resulted in confusing situations. FitGirl Repacks was also blocked, but in this case, the order was not issued by a court.
Susana Martinez-Conde and Stephen Macknik, professors at SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University in Brooklyn, New York, told the court in a proposed class action on Thursday that Apple used illegal "shadow libraries" of pirated books to train Apple Intelligence.
Popular shadow library Anna's Archive has become a top target for copyright holders. In just three years, publishers and authors have prompted Google to remove 749 million of the site's URLs from its search results. Despite this immense takedown campaign, which accounts for 5% of all URLs reported to Google on copyright grounds, the site itself remains easily discoverable through the search engine.
Saw this article earlier, was going to post but its really just a nothingburger, considering in the article itself it shows how trivial it is to still find results for the site on google search lmao, they basically just paid lip service to copyright holders and called it a day.TorrentFreak: Google Removed 749 Million Anna’s Archive URLs from its Search Results (archive)
Not a big deal since you can't trust Google to deliver consistent pirate site (or any other kind of) results, and you should be searching directly at Anna's Archive. I'd be more mad about smaller sites not appearing in results, like "onlinereadfreenovel.com", which could appear if you type the name of a book plus a typical phrase like "read free online".
The scale of it is pretty enormous. Billions and billions of takedowns served, and Anna's Archive is 1 in 20 of all takedowns since 2012 despite coming online in November 2022.Saw this article earlier, was going to post but its really just a nothingburger, considering in the article itself it shows how trivial it is to still find results for the site on google search lmao, they basically just paid lip service to copyright holders and called it a day.
OCLC is no longer looking for millions in damages from Anna's Archive, but has adopted a tactical "takedown" strategy instead. In a renewed motion for default judgment, the organization requests a permanent injunction, to restrain the shadow library from sharing WorldCat data. OCLC believes that an injunction would motivate third-party intermediaries to pull the plug on the site's infrastructure.
robert maxwell's is the person responsible for this. also a bunch of his kids were involved in search engines in the early internet days. you might have heard the name ghislaine maxwell because she ran the reddit /r/news subreddit until 2019. oh, and she was the epstein lady. can't forget that. probably less important than the other stuff, though!Libgen covered me so much in college. it's a tough line to walk, but content in the realm of academia should be free to access for knowledge's sake and the pursuit of understanding alone. The fact it is restricted so heavily does so much damage to you middle and lower classes. I get there has to be some money in it, but maybe that should be reflected in funding rather than bucking the cost onto the individual.
We’re happy to announce that the Chinese release which we started 2 years ago (this month) is finally finished. After much work by our group of Chinese volunteers, we finally managed to release and integrate the DuXiu and other Chinese collections. We’d like to give a quick overview of the different subcollections, and the work involved.
The books from Duxiu have long been pirated on the Chinese internet. Usually they are being sold for less than a dollar by resellers. They are typically distributed using the Chinese equivalent of Google Drive, which has often been hacked to allow for more storage space. Some technical details can be found here and here.
Though the books have been semi-publicly distributed, it is quite difficult to obtain them in bulk. We had this high on our TODO-list, and allocated multiple months of full-time work for it. However, in late 2023 an incredible, amazing, and talented volunteer reached out to us, telling us they had done all this work already — at great expense. They shared the full collection with us, without expecting anything in return, except the guarantee of long-term preservation. Truly remarkable.
Google has removed dozens of new Sci-Hub domain names from its search results in the United States. Unlike typical DMCA takedowns, the removals were triggered by a dated court order that was not enforced for several years. This appears to be one of the first times Google has deindexed an entire pirate site in the U.S. based on a 'site blocking' style injunction.
That's why I advise you that, if you are having a hard time finding things, always remember Google is typically your best option for most things, but still never your only option. Yandex and DuckDuckGo have sometimes helped me a lot with
The fact that they hadn't neutered it years ago, with or without the presence of a court order, shows that the cat-and-mouse game is going well for the mouse.That's why I advise you that, if you are having a hard time finding things, always remember Google is typically your best option for most things, but still never your only option. Yandex and DuckDuckGo have sometimes helped me a lot withjacking off my penis and watching pirated moviesfinding solid academic textbooks and papers.
I'm a little whitepilled about a few things, not just piracy. YouTube (a Google service) has gotten to the point that they now have to allow pretty much open RAYCISSCISS content creators on their platform, because they see the writing on the wall of how society is just getting MO' 'N' MO' RAYCISSCISS. This was not the case even a few years ago. Also, every time I see the modern-day minstrel show of niggers getting arrested on bodycams, the comments are always extremely based.The fact that they hadn't neutered it years ago, with or without the presence of a court order, shows that the cat-and-mouse game is going well for the mouse.
I've caught a few automated "warnings" for posting based comments on some of those videos, but never a ban. Though I do think I'm shadowbanned (at least on some channels), as when I happen across a video I'd watched months prior and spot one of my comments, it has zero interactions/responses even amid hundreds or thousands of other comments that all have thumbs-ups or replies. Not that I care. It's still in Google's fucking databases. Train your AIs on that shit, you fucking assholes!I'm a little whitepilled about a few things, not just piracy. YouTube (a Google service) has gotten to the point that they now have to allow pretty much open RAYCISSCISS content creators on their platform, because they see the writing on the wall of how society is just getting MO' 'N' MO' RAYCISSCISS. This was not the case even a few years ago. Also, every time I see the modern-day minstrel show of niggers getting arrested on bodycams, the comments are always extremely based.
"If you're feeling like shit, take more white pills!"
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46338339 (archive) (mega)We backed up Spotify (metadata and music files). It’s distributed in bulk torrents (~300TB), grouped by popularity.
This release includes the largest publicly available music metadata database with 256 million tracks and 186 million unique ISRCs.
It’s the world’s first “preservation archive” for music which is fully open (meaning it can easily be mirrored by anyone with enough disk space), with 86 million music files, representing around 99.6% of listens.
Anna’s Archive normally focuses on text (e.g. books and papers). We explained in “The critical window of shadow libraries” that we do this because text has the highest information density. But our mission (preserving humanity’s knowledge and culture) doesn’t distinguish among media types. Sometimes an opportunity comes along outside of text. This is such a case.
Similarly, rightsholders also rely on their own ‘bots.’ This definitely applies to Link-Busters, the takedown partner of many major book publishers and the leading sender of takedown notices by far.
In 2025 alone, Link-Busters was good for more than 3.2 billion reported URLs, which dwarfs all other senders.
Not surprisingly, the most targeted domain names are also related to publishing. In fact, the top three domains are all linked to shadow library search engine Anna’s Archive, which has hundreds of millions of URLs flagged.
In terms of accuracy, Link-Busters has a good track record. The company appears to be strictly focused on a subset of problematic sites, mostly shadow libraries.
Update: December 22, 2025 (4:51 AM ET): Spotify has shared the following statement with Android Authority addressing Anna’s Archive’s claims of scraping the platform at scale.
An investigation into unauthorized access identified that a third party scraped public metadata and used illicit tactics to circumvent DRM to access some of the platform’s audio files. We are actively investigating the incident.
Spotify’s statement stops short of confirming the scale described by Anna’s Archive. While the platform says only “some” of its audio files were accessed, Anna’s Archive claims it was able to archive music representing 99.6% of all listens on Spotify.
At this point, it’s unclear how much of the platform was actually affected, what Spotify’s investigation will uncover, or whether any legal action will follow.
For now, the metadata release is being shared by more than 200 people, which means that there is plenty of interest. And we suspect that this will pick up further when the music archives are released.
I don't follow the 3D printing scene. DEFCAD still exists, but for mostly firearm-related files. The Pirate Bay launched a "physibles" category that still exists, but looks completely neglected. There's probably better sites out there for this, but I don't know what they are.So this might be more for the other thread but do shadow libraries exist for other media formats (movies, software, games, music that's not on Spotify, 3d prints etc). I know they exist everywhere online but i mean in the way annas archive operates for example.
Yes I know it's a baby level question.
Anna's Archive offers high-speed access to its full collection via SFTP to groups training large language models (LLMs) in exchange for large contributions of money or data. It said it provided such access to about 30 companies as of January 2025, primarily based in China, including both LLM companies and data brokers. DeepSeek's VL model was partly trained on ebook data from the site.