A collection of academic publishers has filed a lawsuit against the shadow library Libgen.
A collection of academic publishers has sued the shadow library Libgen (Library Genesis), which stores countless pirated books and journals that internet users can download for free.
Cengage, Macmillan Learning, McGraw Hill, and Pearson Education stated in a September 14 complaint that over 20,000 files issued by them were illegally available on the shadow library. They further claimed that Libgen possessed a library of over six million files.
According to the plaintiffs, Libgen was a collection of piracy sites that operated over a wide range of web domains in order to avoid being shut down, and that the sites also sought payments in order to remain operational.
“The Libgen Sites deprive Plaintiffs and their authors of income from their creative works, devalue the textbook market and Plaintiffs’ works, and may cause Plaintiffs to cease publishing certain works,” said the publishers.
Libgen has been the subject of legal action in multiple jurisdictions; it has a large number of mirror sites and supporters who seek to ensure that the catalogue is not jeopardized by legal action. Open access advocates, such as Alexandra Elbakyan, founder of the shadow library Sci-Hub, have defended the need for piracy in a system where academic publishers frequently place critical material behind a paywall.
Shadow libraries are especially popular in emerging economies such as India, where currency exchange rates and import restrictions make obtaining foreign literature difficult. However, book piracy is widespread outside of the Global South.
The Libgen Sites receive a significant number of visitors from users located in the United States. For instance, according to similarweb.com, from March through May 2023 alone, the Sites (collectively) had an average of over 9 million visitors per month from the United States,” said the publishers’ court filing.
They also said that some piracy websites asked for donations in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Moreno. The publishers claimed that one Libgen site had received $182,540 in donations since the beginning of the year.
The FBI confiscated the domains of a Libgen mirror dubbed Z-Library in 2022, and two people suspected of being involved in its activities were detained in Argentina at the behest of US authorities.
Last year, the Indian authorities disabled Z-Library’s primary URL in response to a complaint filed by a scholarly publishing company.
Authors in the United States have accused Big Tech businesses like Meta, OpenAI, and Google of obtaining illicit copies of books from shadow libraries in order to train AI models on these.
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