Library Genesis Sued by 4 Major US Publishing Companies for Alleged Copyright Infringement

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Library Genesis is now the subject of a massive lawsuit regarding copyright infringement. It is reportedly not the first lawsuit the site has received.

Library Genesis Named in a Lawsuit and Was Alleged to Have ‘Staggering’ Infringement Levels

According to Torrent Freak, the copyright infringement lawsuit against Library Genesis was filed by Cengage, Macmillan Learning, McGraw Hill, and Pearson Education. It came as the publishers said that the site might have been based overseas but could not pinpoint its operations.

Citing “staggering” levels of infringement, the firms are seeking damages and a court order that will grant them to seize the “Libgen” site’s domains or put them out of action.

Library Genesis, also known as Libgen, is reportedly a major “shadow library,” with online databases providing access to millions of books and articles released in print, hard to obtain, and paywalled.

Libgen and Sci-Hub Faced a Lawsuit Back in 2015 but Ignored the Decision Regarding Shutting Down

According to The Verge, Libgen and Sci-Hub were ordered to stop their operations after being sued by publisher Elsevier in 2015 at the same court. While Libgen briefly disappeared, the two sites ultimately ignored the court’s decision.

As seen on Court Listener, the latest complaint was filed on September 14 in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, showing how it was filed against Libgen with multiple domains.

Torrent Freak also reported how the lawsuit comes at a time when two alleged operators of Z-Library are reportedly facing a criminal case filed by the US government.

Library Genesis Founded in 2008 in Russia and Reportedly Added Around 500,000 Books

So far, what’s known about Library Genesis is that it was founded in 2008 in Russia and that the type of content it mostly offered includes local language scientific textbooks. 

It was also reported that the “shadow library” added around 500,000 books, predominantly in English, to its Library.nu domain. According to reports, the archives of Libgen received a huge boost after Alexandra Elbakyan, the founder of Sci-Hub, made some additions to its content.

The lawsuit alleged that Libgen’s data of infringing works now consists of more than six million files, with 20,000 of those files published by the plaintiffs.

The 20,000 files were reportedly distributed without any authorization. According to the complaint, tens of thousands of academic works are being published annually by the plaintiffs. 

Read Also: TikTok Hit with Landmark $368 Million Fine by European Regulators for Child Privacy Violations

Libgen Operates as a ‘Shadow Library’ Which Allows Users to Download Books for Free

The complaint also highlighted how Libgen operates as “one of the largest, most notorious, and far-reaching infringement operations in the world.”

It also said it is “a group of pirate websites” that illegally copied written material and distributed them online without any authorization “and with no remuneration to copyright holders.”

The complaint further noted that Libgen is a “shadow library” that allows users to download various books for free. These books included fiction and non-fiction, as well as educational textbooks and other types of works.

It added that Libgen has “no legal justification for what they do and operate in complete and knowing defiance of the rule of law,” Torrent Freak reported. 

Related Article: X Unveils Government ID Verification for Premium Users with Exclusive ‘Prioritized Support’

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