Feds Arrest Russians Accused of Running the Largest Pirated E-Book Library 73
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Last month, the alleged masterminds behind Z-Library -- an e-book pirate site that claims to be "the world's largest library" -- were arrested. According to a press release yesterday from the US Department of Justice, Russian nationals Anton Napolsky and Valeriia Ermakova have been charged with "criminal copyright infringement, wire fraud and money laundering for operating Z-Library." "As alleged, the defendants profited illegally off work they stole, often uploading works within mere hours of publication, and in the process victimized authors, publishers, and booksellers," Breon Peace, the United States attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement.
At the request of the US government, Napolsky and Ermakova were arrested in Argentina on November 3. On the same day, the US government seized "a complex network of approximately 249 interrelated web domains," the press release said. For many less web-savvy users, the domain seizure essentially shut down access to Z-Library's 11 million e-books, but anyone on the dark web knows it's still up and running -- suggesting that while arresting Napolsky and Ermakova has stifled Z-Library, it has not shuttered it, and it could come back. TorrentFreak reported that it's still unknown if the pair has been involved with Z-Library since the start. Michael J. Driscoll, the assistant director in charge at the New York Federal Bureau of Investigation field office, seems to suspect they have. Although the indictment is only focused on the duo's alleged criminal activity between 2018 and 2022, Driscoll said that they are believed to have "operated a website for over a decade whose central purpose was providing stolen intellectual property, in violation of copyright laws."
"Intellectual property theft crimes deprive their victims of both ingenuity and hard-earned revenue," Driscoll said. "The FBI is determined to ensure those willing to steal and profit from the creativity of others are stopped and made to face the consequences in the criminal justice system." If Napolsky and Ermakova are charged, the indictment said that they will be required to "forfeit any property, real or personal, constituting, or derived from, proceeds obtained directly or indirectly as a result of such offenses." TorrentFreak reported that Argentina has not yet received a request from the US to extradite the accused Z-Library operators, but that will be the next step toward shutting down Z-Library. "Z-Library has linked eager readers to millions of free e-books since 2009, but it wasn't until Z-Library began recently trending on TikTok that authors protesting the piracy decided enough was enough," adds Ars. The TikTok hashtag #zlibrary was viewed 19 million times, which spurred The Authors Guild to complain to the Office of the United States Trade Representative.
"Z-Library is killing us," romance writer Sarina Bowen told officials. "A book we release in the morning is up on Z-Library by lunchtime. This isn't the only site that hurts us, but it's the site that keeps showing up in TikTok videos."
At the request of the US government, Napolsky and Ermakova were arrested in Argentina on November 3. On the same day, the US government seized "a complex network of approximately 249 interrelated web domains," the press release said. For many less web-savvy users, the domain seizure essentially shut down access to Z-Library's 11 million e-books, but anyone on the dark web knows it's still up and running -- suggesting that while arresting Napolsky and Ermakova has stifled Z-Library, it has not shuttered it, and it could come back. TorrentFreak reported that it's still unknown if the pair has been involved with Z-Library since the start. Michael J. Driscoll, the assistant director in charge at the New York Federal Bureau of Investigation field office, seems to suspect they have. Although the indictment is only focused on the duo's alleged criminal activity between 2018 and 2022, Driscoll said that they are believed to have "operated a website for over a decade whose central purpose was providing stolen intellectual property, in violation of copyright laws."
"Intellectual property theft crimes deprive their victims of both ingenuity and hard-earned revenue," Driscoll said. "The FBI is determined to ensure those willing to steal and profit from the creativity of others are stopped and made to face the consequences in the criminal justice system." If Napolsky and Ermakova are charged, the indictment said that they will be required to "forfeit any property, real or personal, constituting, or derived from, proceeds obtained directly or indirectly as a result of such offenses." TorrentFreak reported that Argentina has not yet received a request from the US to extradite the accused Z-Library operators, but that will be the next step toward shutting down Z-Library. "Z-Library has linked eager readers to millions of free e-books since 2009, but it wasn't until Z-Library began recently trending on TikTok that authors protesting the piracy decided enough was enough," adds Ars. The TikTok hashtag #zlibrary was viewed 19 million times, which spurred The Authors Guild to complain to the Office of the United States Trade Representative.
"Z-Library is killing us," romance writer Sarina Bowen told officials. "A book we release in the morning is up on Z-Library by lunchtime. This isn't the only site that hurts us, but it's the site that keeps showing up in TikTok videos."
Re:Waste of taxpayer money (Score:5, Insightful)
A short copyright term is a privilege given to creators to encourage creation, not a right to extort people for decades.
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Right... it is always worth remembering that nobody owns ideas. You hum a tune and everyone who hears it has derivatives in their brain thereafter.
All human knowledge (and therefore data) is property of everyone privy to it and everyone you share it with has a right to share it on.
As you said, we made up intellectual property in hopes it would result in more content being shared and ultimately falling into the public domain. Whether people actually create more under that scheme than they did before it is de
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I remember a Florida senator trying to do that but everyone was against it because they didn't like his "reasons."
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Either by paying everyone more so they can afford everything, or make everything cheaper so they can afford it.
Everything? Including, say, Lamborghini's or Falcon 9 boosters? (pulling something super expensive out the air)
I know I'm being hyperbolic, but maybe dial that "everything" back a bit.
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That is how capitalism works. That is how I am told the country works at least. Let the market figure it out. Well the market is telling you, you have priced things to high. So instead of decreasing the price or offering better value, waste tax payers moneys. CAPITALISM!
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The problem is that people who hate capitalism have been educating everyone for decades now and most people don't really believe in it... including those engaging in it.
What difference does that make? It makes a huge difference. You used to have mostly businesspeople who believed they were doing good and helping their communities through capitalism. This impacted how they ran their businesses. They'd try to provide the best and most products/services they could with the notion that the money would follow. A
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Evolution does not select what is best long term, it selects for what is best right now.
Capitalism has evolved to the point where anything except making the most money - right now - is shed. Common good? Gone the way of the dodo. Exploitation? Does that mean higher profits? Then heck yes!
There are things that curtail this behaviour: laws, and customer behaviour/preferences.
Huge whopping fines, on a regular basis, show the government(s) are still in the game. Their effectiveness is somewhat dubious.
'Et
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"But it is fundamentally neutral, and market forces inevitably drive it towards a brutally exploitive state."
It is neutral but you've given an example of exactly the perspective I'm talking about. If someone like you engages in capitalism you will behave exactly as you've described. This attitude is built on dehumanizing the capitalist and putting all responsibility for being human, moral, and ethical on the state which is itself no more concerned or aligned with good by nature than capitalism and is mostly
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Why not? I'm sure many broke engineers would love to have falcon 9 boosters.
As for lambos... why do we need any exclusive or special 'elite' content for the wealthy? All that does is encourage excess. I believe in capitalism but not having to worry about resources in life is enough motivator without artificial exclusive content. The world would be a better place without this content and without enabling people to cheat their way to wealth by selling it.
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Information wants nothing. Silly people want information to want things.
Re: Information wants to be free! (Score:3)
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Correction. Information doesn't want anything but its natural and innate state is to be free and spread.
trade them to get Brittney Griner back! (Score:2)
trade them to get Brittney Griner back!
Re: trade them to get Brittney Griner back! (Score:2)
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ESPECIALLY MARVEL.
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> Fiction is stupid and only has a negative contribution to the world.
Found the guy complaining that the Boy Who Cried Wolf parable wasn't based on an actual story. /s
Not sure if stupid or if tolling ... but lighten up Francis.
Entertainment value aside parables, satire, and fiction lets people present perspectives, commentary and criticism that would otherwise be censored or ignored in a way that can appeal to the masses.
*Good* Sci-Fi as demonstrated by the Sci-Fi master themselves: Isaac Asimov, Arthur
Re: Stop writing books! (Score:2)
Re: Stop writing books! (Score:1)
"World's largest" (Score:2)
"Are they talking about the bordello?"
"No! The burlesque house. So just keep your mouth shut."
One day (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:One day (Score:4, Insightful)
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I knew someone would trot out the "rights" argument.
"to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries". (US Constitution, Article I, Section 8, Clause 8)
Your statement doesn't include the "limited times" component. That is crucial to the balance of 1) the author, to motivate them (not guarantee!) to spend their time to write down ideas and stories and to be compensated for it, whil
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Should have stayed in Russia (Score:4, Interesting)
No rush, take your time. We have long memories.
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If US citizens in say, Serbia, were violating Russian and Serbian laws concurrently, they should absolutely be fair game.https://news.slashdot.org/users.pl
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It works both ways. Russia could kidnap US citizens for breaking Russian laws. This is a dangerous precedent.
Not really, they already do that. It's why westerners should never go to Russia, or China, or North Korea or Iran or Belarus and various other Neosoviet client states where there are no civil or human rights.
The difference is that they are much more likely to want to come to the West than we are wanting to go to those lawless places. If they stay in their shithole dictatorships they will (or at least might) be fine, and if we stay in our relatively free countries we should be fine as well. Would be ki
Uhm ... no? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm an author, I had to use this website to access the book I wrote several chapters of because the publisher decided to be greedy and charge the authors an exuberant amount for a copy. Fuck Elsevier.
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Are you trying to say they have other priorities than protecting authors ?!
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This part is definitely not true: "process victimized authors, publishers, and booksellers,"
I'm an author, I had to use this website to access the book I wrote several chapters of because the publisher decided to be greedy and charge the authors an exuberant amount for a copy. Fuck Elsevier.
You didn't keep your own copy of the book you wrote? Did you suffer a recent blow to the head?
Re:Uhm ... no? (Score:4, Informative)
This part is definitely not true: "process victimized authors, publishers, and booksellers,"
I'm an author, I had to use this website to access the book I wrote several chapters of because the publisher decided to be greedy and charge the authors an exuberant amount for a copy. Fuck Elsevier.
I'm a bookseller. I also do not feel victimized.
Copyright is supposed to exist "to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries". (US Constitution, Article I, Section 8, Clause 8)
Eternal access restrictions for the benefit of profit-mongers should not be a thing.
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Well, frack... (Score:2)
There goes my best way of previewing cookbooks...
Killing us? (Score:3)
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How much damage is really happening from Z-Library? I understand that work is being stolen and posted for piracy, but how much is that truly impacting the author? Are authors seeing a sizable hit to their bottom line?
If they're not getting paid for their work, yes.
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Only if the damage amounts to anything that would be considered reasonable. Are they loosing 1% of their sales, 10%, or 0.00001%? Maybe the problem is bad enough that they're loosing what amounts to a meaningful percentage of their income, but it would be interesting to see that figure.
So then San Francisco saying they won't punish people who take a certain dollar amount of goods from a store is doing the righ thing since it's a reasonable amount. Got it.
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So then San Francisco saying they won't punish people who take a certain dollar amount of goods from a store is doing the righ thing since it's a reasonable amount. Got it.
That is for sure a judgement call. Certainly if you are spending tens of thousands of taxpayer dollars to detain and/or punish someone for stealing a loaf of bread then you are not entitled to complain about waste in government.
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If they're not getting paid for work that they would otherwise have been paid for, and not getting paid more for work through generating interest with the freebies - see the comment from Vaelynx below.
It might actually hit the really big authors. Hence this action.
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I'm unlikely to buy a random author's e-book unless I can read a significant preview of it first. At least a chapter. Fortunately Kindle lets me return a book before finishing it, which I have done. Most books are mediocre at best. Z-Library was a fantastic tool for checking out new literature, which I am wont to buy, often in dead-tree format. I also used it to format-shift some old books I have (1950s and 60s) into a convenient ebook format.
Despite massive copyright infringement, I suspect strongly t
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I understand that work is being stolen and posted for piracy
Your understanding is false. There is no theft involved. All what happens is that an additional copy is created and made accessible to the general public. The process of copying and making accessible is prohibited, but does not constitute theft. The rightful owners still retain ownership of their copies.
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Another reason paper is better (Score:2)
Once again we see the age old tradition of printing books is superior to technology. Show us how many books are being physicaly copied and sold on the black market. The cost to do so isn't worth the effort.
Another "win" for greedy scumbags (Score:3)
Bluntly, book piracy has the opposite effect to what you think, because in the end, the null option is not bothering with your works. In fact, it's had the opposite effect - there's at least two book series I originally got hooked on by copies transferred to me by friends, whose latter installments in paper I bought and had mailed to me whenever released, generating altogether around five hundred bucks of revenue just from the ones I can think of - and that's revenue that absolutely wouldn't exist otherwise because I rarely buy a "cat in a bag".
"The largest e-book library" (Score:2)
If that gives the Authors Guild and the other copyright bastards a hard-on, woop-dee-doo.
People will stop sharing books when copyright terms are REASONABLE. Think 5 years instead of fucking 95 years.
How can FBI operate outside the US (Score:1)
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Z-Library is the best place... (Score:5, Interesting)
According to Wikipedia: "Z-Library (abbreviated as z-lib, formerly BookFinder) is a shadow library project for file-sharing access to scholarly journal articles, academic texts and general-interest books. It originated as a mirror of Library Genesis, from which most of its books originate.[3] Individuals can also upload files.[4]
Z-Library was ranked as the 8,182th most active website by the Alexa Traffic Rank service in October 2021.[5] It is especially popular in emerging economies and among academics.[6] As of October 1, 2022, Z-Library reported having more than 11,291,325 books and 84,837,643 articles.[7] It also describes itself as "the world's largest e-book library", as well as "the world's largest scientific articles store", and as a non-profit organization sustained by donations." - Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
So, good job nobody's told TikTok or the FBI about Library Genesis yet.
Feds Accused of Running Pirated Library Z-Lib (Score:1)
For a moment I was sure the headline read as:
"Feds Accused of Running the Largest Pirated E-Book Library Z-Lib"
Wouldn't that be a hoot?!
Hydra (Score:2)
Cut the head of one and two more will come back in its place.
Hail Hydra.
Argentina should hold an auction. (Score:2)
Z-Library is still accessible with Tor Browser (Score:2)
Z-Library is still accessible with Tor Browser. So all is not lost.
Invite? (Score:1)
CopyWrong (Score:1)
Student textbooks (Score:2)
Profit? (Score:1)
America has outflanked them... (Score:2)
...nobody reads books anymore!
Ha ha fuck you Russia!