Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win (arstechnica.com)
from schizoidman@lemmy.ml to technology@lemmy.world on 21 Jun 2024 23:12
https://lemmy.ml/post/17150854

#technology

threaded - newest

notnotmike@programming.dev on 21 Jun 2024 23:49 next collapse

I was looking for resources for a custom LLM and noticed they had a ton of copyrighted books and wondered to myself how the heck that was legal

I guess this answers that

cafeinux@infosec.pub on 21 Jun 2024 23:55 collapse

Just like regular libraries have copyrighted books: they lend them to one person at a time.

Nougat@fedia.io on 21 Jun 2024 23:59 next collapse

Which IA failed to do, which is why they got sued, and why they can’t lend those publishers’ books at all anymore.

I have no sympathy.

db2@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 00:03 next collapse

They should have known better…

stembolts@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 00:29 collapse

“Because what is legal is always right.
And what is right is always legal.”

No?

In a fascist state, your mindset is welcome, “Well they broke the rule, they must pay,” but do you never abstract one more level? Is the rule itself breaking something?

Those who downvote you say yes. Nuance is important. The rule has two main affects that I see.

  1. Direct effect (the goal) :Publishers maintain a monopoly on bookselling low value books, the structure of their business preventing any competition.

Okay lets think about #1. Is that good or bad?

  1. Indirect effect : the members of that society now have a restricted access to knowledge.

Okay lets think about #2. Is that good or bad?

Being critical in thought enough to recognize the flaws of the first quote is key.

wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 01:01 collapse

This isn’t about right or wrong though. It’s explicitly about whether or not they broke the law.

They did. They did so loudly and proudly. This is why we are here, where they lost the legal battle.

If someone is pointing a gun at you with their finger on the trigger, and you say “Just try to shoot me! I dare you! You know you won’t you little chickenshit.” then you should have a pretty good expectation to get shot.

Everything else is valid, but significantly less important. IA has to operate in the rules that currently exist, not what the rules should be. There are better ways to get bad laws changed than to dare someone to find you guilty of them.

Maybe this case will be the first building block towards overturning the asinine digital lending laws. I would love if it was, but I’m not holding my breath.

stembolts@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 02:50 collapse

It would be more accurate if you said, “This is not about right and wrong (for me).”

If you say it’s not about right and wrong, dead stop, then you are pledging full faith to the institutions, the very ones we are critiquing.

Basically, you are dismissing my opinion as misguided, dismissing me as missing the point and I am telling you it was expressed exactly as intended.

In short, you are arguing on the wrong conceptual meta-level for me to respond without dismissing my own claim. If I take as True that “this isn’t about right and wrong” (it is), then I am setting aside the power I have in a democratic society to say, “Fuck this I’m changing it.” Maybe we’ve just been stuck in gridlock politics, with a ruling class that strips and monetizes every aspect of humanity that the society today doesn’t realize the power citizens wield.

Not sure. Been fun to think and share thoughts with you though. Thanks for your time and have a nice night.

An impasse is a perfectly acceptable outcome on a sane platform like Lemmy.

whocares314@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 00:04 next collapse

(citation needed)

Aatube@kbin.melroy.org on 22 Jun 2024 00:19 next collapse

McNamara seemed to suggest that publishers would have been further enriched if not for IA providing unprecedented free, unlimited e-books access.

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2023/03/book-publishers-with-surging-profits-struggle-to-prove-internet-archive-hurt-sales/, linked in a link in the article

whocares314@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 01:41 collapse

FWIW I didn’t downvote you for this. I read the Ars article and saw the bit about them making it unlimited during the early pandemic days, but it seemed to imply that is was above board during other times. So if the whole case hinges on their actions during lockdown when people lost access to their own local libraries it becomes a letter vs spirit of the law thing to me personally. They broke the letter of the law, did they break the spirit of it? Was what they did immoral? The justice system isn’t perfect and as a society we continually refine and redefine our laws and have been forever. The state of Louisiana just signed a law into effect that requires poster sized copies of the Ten Commandments be posted in every classroom, kindergarten through college. If someone breaks that law, what side of history will they be on?

If unlimited lending was something that IA was doing all the time, I can see it both ways. If it was for a few months during lockdown, then I think the court got this wrong.

Aatube@kbin.melroy.org on 22 Jun 2024 02:11 collapse

Unfortunately, that's like saying everyone has the right to read any book that IA usually archives for free at any time. Do I agree with that? Yes. Does it hurt intellectual property? Yes. There's obviously evidence that readers used the service a lot. I agree with the principle, but they should've just temporarily "merged" with public libraries and increased borrowing limits for books in stock, not allow everyone in the United States to just get a book as long as they have less than 9 other books as well.

FaceDeer@fedia.io on 22 Jun 2024 00:25 collapse
Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 00:06 next collapse

Just want to let you know why you’re being downvoted. It’s not because you’re wrong. From a legal perspective you’re right. This court case was decided this way because you’re right.

But that last line about having no sympathy. There’s a meme for this.

“You’re not wrong. You’re just an asshole.”

FaceDeer@fedia.io on 22 Jun 2024 00:23 next collapse

It's an asshole perspective that the IA dearly needs to listen to. Don't poke a bear when you have so much to lose. Doesn't matter if you're "in the right". The history books are littered with the corpses of righteous people.

Let the EFF handle the quixotic battles, it's what they're best at.

stembolts@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 00:30 collapse

“No one should stand up for new rights. Don’t rock the boat bro.”

Your mindset is the road to a dictatorship.

What does the Mafia do? Show up, “Wow you got a lot of valuable things here Be a shame if someone broke them. Best listen to us.”

The Mafia leverages potential of damage to existing value to extract cooperation.

I see very little difference here between the Mafia and the plaintiff.

FaceDeer@fedia.io on 22 Jun 2024 00:48 next collapse

You somehow overlooked the second paragraph in my comment. I explicitly said the opposite of that.

stembolts@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 00:49 collapse

I had nothing to say to that. I agree with it.

One paragraph discusses action, the other discusses philosophy. I only took issue with your regressive philosophy. I’m open to correcting misunderstandings, elaborate if you feel I continue to miss something.

FaceDeer@fedia.io on 22 Jun 2024 01:04 collapse

I only took issue with your regressive philosophy

The "regressive philosophy" you're accusing me of holding is the opposite of what I said. There's your misunderstanding to be corrected.

I don't like the publishers, I think copyright has gone bananas with its various extensions over the years, I want to see them fought and defeated in court. The problem here is who is doing the fighting.

Imagine a scenario where there's a ravenous man-eating bear in the woods. There's two people available to fight it; a grizzled woodsman who makes it his entire business to go out and fight bears, and the village librarian who's carrying around a backpack full of irreplaceable books. For some reason the librarian is out there poking the bear with a stick, and when the bear didn't initially respond he started whacking it over the nose. Now the bear is chewing on the librarian's leg and the librarian is crying out "oh no, my backback full of books is in danger!"

Well duh. You shouldn't have been carrying that backpack into harm's way like that. Nobody is in the least bit surprised that the bear attacked the librarian under those circumstances. I don't have to be on the bear's side to understand how this situation was going to go down and call the librarian an idiot for willingly getting into it.

The woodsman (the EFF) should have been the ones to take this fight. They're better at it, it's their job, and if they fail they don't risk that precious backpack in the process. The librarian should have kept his books safely ensconced until the fight was over and it was safe for him to bring them out. If he really wanted those books distributed in the meantime, there are some sites who are already out there running around under the bear's nose taking that risk for their own reasons; let them continue taking those risks for now. The IA's job is to protect the archive.

AmidFuror@fedia.io on 22 Jun 2024 00:49 next collapse

"Societies with rule of law are dictatorships. How leaders are selected and the existence of fundamental Constitutional rights is not a factor."

How you like them strawmen?

stembolts@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 00:57 collapse

It’s a quote of an opinion, so in general I ignore them. I’m usually more interested in distilling ideas constructed with some line of reasoning.

But I guess we can look at this one. Find it’s essence. Tho it doesn’t seem very deep…

“Societies with rule of law are dictatorships. How leaders are selected and the existence of fundamental Constitutional rights is not a factor.”

So in short.

Having laws at all is a dictatorship.

Yeah, that is one of the opinions I’d ignore. It’s easy to have that opinion inside the walls of a lawed society.

Luckily it is valid to respond to an opinion with an opinion, and mine is that I imagine everyone (except the strongest with the most resources) would abandon that perspective as soon as they lived in a world with no laws.

bionicjoey@lemmy.ca on 22 Jun 2024 00:51 next collapse

IA definitely has too much to lose to afford picking fights. They got off lucky only having to remove the books. If they had been fined for many counts of copyright infringement, we could have had another library of Alexandria burning situation.

wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 00:52 next collapse

Yes, let’s just completely misrepresent someone and pretend it’s a quote! That’s fun!

There are effective ways to challenge laws and to push for new rights. Loudly shouting “I don’t care about your rules, just try and stop me!” was not an effective way for IA to try and do this.

Furthermore, IA constantly misrepresenting the problem and why they were sued in all their blog posts and press shit also does not help the cause.

It’s a law in desperate need of abolishment, but this is not how you go about changing it.

This also was not an effective way for them to ensure these books would continue to be available digitally for the public. They could have quietly leaked batches of the content that only they had out to the ebook piracy groups in a staggered fashion to help obsfucate where it was coming from, then hosted a blog post telling people how to pirate ebooks and where, with a cover your ass disclaimer that everyone needs to abide by their local laws.

By any metric of success, the way they handled this set them up to lose from the start, and jeapordized one of the most important public resources in the current era. This would be understandable from some small operation of like 5 people trying to digitize shit, not from an organization as large and old as IA.

I’m not the person who said he had no sympathy, but that is why I have little sympathy about all this: They don’t deserve this outcome, I wish they had won, and I hope the law gets overturned or revised… but they absolutely should have know better that to try and do this the way they did. They fucked around and found out. This coild have ended so much worse for them.

doodledup@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 01:03 collapse

Omg this can’t be any more unrelated. Hyperbole much?

fin@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 01:15 next collapse

Isn’t it “asshole” to consume copyrighted works for free?

halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 01:53 next collapse

That depends on if you see the current copyright system as far to start with. The current system is a far cry from how it was created and was co-opted by companies like Disney to maintain monopolies on their IP for MUCH longer than the system was supposed to protect.

MossyFeathers@pawb.social on 22 Jun 2024 02:05 next collapse

This. If I’m not mistaken, the system was meant to operate like a hybrid between patents and trademarks. Iirc, things weren’t originally under copyright by default and you had to regularly renew your copyright in order to keep it. Most of the media in the public domain is a result of companies failing to properly claim or renew copyright before the laws were changed. My understanding is that the reason for this was because the intent was to protect you from having your IP stolen while it was profitable to you, but then release said IP into the public domain once it was no longer profitable (aka wasn’t worth renewing copyright on).

Then corpos spent a lot of money rewriting the system and now practically everything even remotely creative is under copyright that’s effectively indefinite.

halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 02:15 collapse

It wasn’t just “the corpos”, you can basically tie changes to the copyright system back to Disney trying to maintain a strangle hold on their fucking mouse.

web.law.duke.edu/cspd/mickey/

polarbear@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 09:45 collapse

doesn’t Disney count as ‘the corpos’?

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 13:53 collapse

It counts as a corpo. Not multiple corpos.

Credit where credit is due.

[deleted] on 22 Jun 2024 02:39 next collapse

.

Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 05:12 collapse

“With 3 simple circles, I dominate the planet!” ~ERB’s depiction of Walt Disney.

TheTetrapod@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 02:03 next collapse

Unequivocally no.

Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml on 22 Jun 2024 02:16 next collapse

Copyright is bullshit, so no.

ripcord@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 03:21 collapse

Copyright serves a very useful purpose. It’s just been twisted into something it wasn’t meant to be.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 13:35 next collapse

Exactly. Copyright used to last 14 years and required an application for a one-time extension. Let’s go back to that.

ripcord@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 14:02 collapse

100%.

The whole point was to “promote the useful arts” by allowing creators SOME time to make money off their work. People would be way less likely to write a book, a news artucle, make a movie, etc if someone else could just instantly sell copies and you couldn’t support yourself with the work.

But the whole point was to give you enough protections to make it worth your while.

If you can’t make enough money off of the work in 14 (or 28) years for it to have been worth it, then it’s not worth it.

No one has ever said “if this isn’t going to give me the exclusive right to make copies for 80 years after my death, then there’s no point making it”. And that was the only point to copyright. Doing the minimum to allow people to realistically make new stuff.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 14:09 collapse

Exactly. This was created like 200 years ago when books took years to print and distribute. Since information travels much more quickly now, a work is probably going to succeed or fail in the first 5 years. So drop 14 to 10 and it’s probably more than enough.

Companies can still use trademark indefinitely, so they still get their brand protections. Screw modern copyright.

Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml on 22 Jun 2024 14:52 collapse

You misunderstand me. When I say, “copyright is bullshit” I don’t mean that I don’t like it, or that it doesn’t work. I mean it’s bullshit in the same way that the crystal healing or mushroom cancer therapy is bullshit.

You cannot steal an idea, it’s impossible. So creating laws that punish people for doing things like copying a digital file doesn’t make sense. Copyright supposedly was created to create an incentive for artists and inventors to make cool and enriching stuff.

But what it actually does is protects business savvy people and allows them to game the system, get first mover advantage over all others, and then punish any potential competitors in that space.

As if nobody was creating artwork or inventing useful devices before copyright law came into being.

Just because something is useful doesn’t make it good, atomic bombs are useful, factory farming is useful.

I think the only thing people should be protected from as a creator is fraud. You can copy a person’s works and modify or distribute them in any manner you see fit, as long as it’s clear that you are not the original creator. You cannot claim to be them or to be affiliated with them unless you actually are.

That is what the principle of copyleft is all about. If copyright worked in principle, then you should see millions of individual creators enriched and protected by it.

But you don’t see that, instead, a few giant mega corps and super wealthy tycoons own and control enormous swaths of “intellectual property” and small time creators struggle to make ends meet and are sued into oblivion by the same powerful groups.

Sure it’s great for boosting wealth and GDP, but that boost does not apply to most of the population, it applies to the tiny elite that has now captures enormous segments of the market and fight tooth and nail to keep it that way.

Copyright is structurally flawed, it doesn’t work because it cannot work. It’s fundamentally based on a the nonsensical concept of “intellectual property” which as I said at the beginning, is bullshit.

ripcord@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 15:29 collapse

I’m not sure I misunderstood you at all.

Copy left, incieldentally, is a form of copyright.

Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml on 22 Jun 2024 15:50 collapse

It only exists to counter the existing framework. In an ideal world, nobody would honor or respect the idea of “intellectual property” and hence, only fraud would be punished.

uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 22 Jun 2024 02:42 next collapse

Not for over half a century, once Disney lobbied the US federal government to extend temporary monopolies to egregious lengths. The point of intellectual property rights is to build a robust public domain, so every year of every extension is a year denied to the public.

This has been forgotten or ignored by the ownership class with Sony and Nintendo prosecuting use and public archival abandonware games the way Disney goes after nursery murals.

So no, we would be better off with no IP laws all than the current laws we have, and the ownership class routinely screw artists, developers and technicians for their cut of their share of the profits in what is known as Hollywood Accounting. And the record labels will cheat any artist or performer who doesn’t have a Hammerhead Lawyer (or bigger) to ensure their contract is kosher.

So no. Come with me to Barbary; we’ll ply there up and down. 🏴‍☠️

Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 05:11 collapse

Preach brotha, PREACH!!!

cm0002@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 02:46 next collapse

No.

Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 05:10 next collapse

No. Here, let me introduce you to things like libraries, and education.

And, again, he’s not an asshole for being right. He’s an asshole for having no sympathy for the loss of what should have been an archival giant.

southsamurai@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 07:15 next collapse

As a published (if hilariously unsuccessful) author; no, no it isn’t.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 13:34 collapse

I have talked to a few published authors (most unsuccessful) and listened to a few successful published authors, and they all say the same as you. Some of them (esp. successful) give away free books on their website. They just want people to read their books.

The ones complaining here aren’t the authors, but the publishers.

southsamurai@sh.itjust.works on 23 Jun 2024 05:51 collapse

Yeah, even the big names tend to not care much as long as nobody else is profiting off of their work. Agents and publishers, they tend to get right snippy about piracy lol.

Mind you, there is a segment of working authors that do suffer in their ability to go from a part time, almost hobbyist situation into a proper career of it. They tend to see the lack of sales as more of a problem, but they tend to be younger and didn’t ever see how impossible breaking in to traditional publishing was. It’s easy to look at your self published income and think “oh, if people had to buy these, I’d be making a living at this instead of it being barely enough to cover expenses for writing”. But, most of the time, back before self publishing was actually a valid and useful route, they wouldn’t have been selling anything, they’d be hoping for an agent to get their first sale for them.

And I’ll never tell anyone that they can’t profit from their own ideas and labor, and expect anyone consuming it to pay up. Authors that object, that’s fine by me (and I actually don’t pirate their stuff). But like you said, most writers would rather someone read and enjoy for free rather than not read at all.

KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 17:11 collapse

no?

Redistributing them, especially for money, maybe.

Nougat@fedia.io on 22 Jun 2024 03:20 collapse

"You're not wrong. You're just an asshole."

I made my peace with that a long time ago.

Gormadt@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 22 Jun 2024 05:53 collapse

You should strive to improve as a person rather than be content being a stagnant asshole

Nougat@fedia.io on 22 Jun 2024 09:42 collapse

I know who I am.

otp@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 11:21 next collapse

But you should know who you could grow to be.

Nougat@fedia.io on 22 Jun 2024 23:31 collapse

Exactly. This is the best I’ve got. I could be so much worse.

otp@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 23:47 collapse

Don’t restrict yourself with a fixed mindset.

Growth mindset. You could be better. Always.

KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 17:11 collapse

you can still be an asshole, and have sympathy for the loss of accessible educational material strictly for the purposes of monetization. Unless you are one of these publishing companies, in which case you probably won’t be on the internet for very long.

ABCDE@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 00:08 next collapse

That is what happens though, it’s clear about that.

Oisteink@feddit.nl on 22 Jun 2024 00:32 next collapse

They claimed to use the same protections as others. Is there a more accurate article about how their lending was faulty?

reddig33@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 00:44 next collapse

During Covid, they lent out multiple copies of the same book when they only had physical access to one copy. It would be like your local library making Xerox copies of their collection and handing them out. There’s no protections for that.

vox.com/…/emergency-library-internet-archive-cont…

wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 00:54 collapse

Not sure about an article, but they themselves announced that their emergency covid library would not set limits on the amount of copies that could be checked out. That’s literally the law they broke, that it has to be 1 to 1 outside of any other agreement.

[deleted] on 22 Jun 2024 03:08 next collapse

.

Nighed@feddit.uk on 22 Jun 2024 09:06 collapse

They should have poked the bear with a separate legal entity so the obvious resulting legal loss wouldn’t effect their core operations.

I support the idea as long as it’s for dead authors/out of print books, but from what I understand they were just letting people ‘borrow’ anything? That’s just stupid (if idealistic)

notnotmike@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 01:33 collapse

They definitely weren’t monitoring the one at a time rule… I downloaded the file and now have it forever

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 13:30 collapse

Sounds like a you problem. ;)

notnotmike@programming.dev on 24 Jun 2024 15:07 collapse

How does that make sense? How does putting a “Download PDF” button on their site with no restrictions make this a “me” problem?

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 24 Jun 2024 16:50 collapse

You should obviously delete those downloaded files like a good boy.

DancingBear@midwest.social on 22 Jun 2024 00:26 next collapse

Don’t worry. It’s all on the way back machine 👀

MrWafflesNBacon@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 02:04 collapse

You do realize that the Internet Archive also manages the WayBack machine? (Not sure if your joking or not)

TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 04:35 next collapse

That was clearly in jest lol

wanderingmagus@lemm.ee on 22 Jun 2024 20:48 collapse

Poe’s Law and the lack of /s strikes again!

DancingBear@midwest.social on 23 Jun 2024 13:12 collapse

Yea I know I was teasing

ChowJeeBai@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 01:08 next collapse

Welp, hope they’re backed up somewhere in an uncentralised, segmented, shareable form where people can still access them from the internet.

AutistoMephisto@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 03:11 collapse

There’s a Minecraft server that has books and articles stored. it’s called The Uncensored Library, (visit.uncensoredlibrary.com), and they have various articles and books that are free to view. The Uncensored Library was created by Reporters Without Borders. If I were the people of the Internet Archive, I’d be talking to the folks in the RSF about porting some of their content to this virtual library.

Jordan117@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 03:57 collapse

It only contains a relatively small collection of banned reporting from various countries, not the whole Internet Archive, and only in the form of in-game books, not anything really usable IRL. It’s neat but basically a promotional project for RWB.

AutistoMephisto@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 05:02 next collapse

Maybe I’m just seeing potential where there isn’t any, but I really think if the people of the Archive could find a way to get their stuff stored in TUL, or perhaps build a Library of their own, the publishers couldn’t go after them then, because to the outside observer, all they see is a buncha dudes playing Minecraft.

Jordan117@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 08:09 collapse

It’s just not practical – no Minecraft server or map can realistically hold all the books in the Archive, or even just the 500k that were removed. Even if it could, you’d only be able to read them by literally taking your avatar to the book object and reading it in the tiny in-game interface.

The Minecraft thing is just a gimmick to promote awareness of press freedom and censorship, not a plausible way to deliver books to people. If the IA wanted to “set books free” they’d be better off using torrents or something like Libgen (and even then they’d still be criminally liable for making the files available, even if the publishers couldn’t stop the files from being shared further).

fuzzzerd@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 14:15 collapse

Maybe the fact you have to be there and read it while connected is the secret sauce to prove that it’s a “real” library, meaning they have a fixed number of copies (max players connected to the server at any given time) and that helps them get protected the same way a real library is?

Sidyctism2@discuss.tchncs.de on 22 Jun 2024 17:27 collapse

Doubt thats the point. I mean, real libraries at this point also lend out e-books, and i dont think they have an upper limit. Probably more to do that libraries (or the cities that finance them) have deals with publishers, and IA doesnt.

whatwhatwhatwhat@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 21:27 collapse

YMMV, but my local library system has a limit on the number of e-books that can be checked out at a time. Some e-books they only have 1 or 2 “copies” of, other they have 20+ “copies”. Seems dumb to me that there’s a limit, but I’m sure they’re forced to do it for a reason.

Sidyctism2@discuss.tchncs.de on 22 Jun 2024 23:45 collapse

Ugh. Oh well, cant have nice things i guess

KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 17:09 collapse

IRL. It’s neat but basically a promotional project for RWB.

you could easily stuff a script to rip the books out and stuff them into usable formats pretty easily, minecraft worlds are just a list of files.

Though i haven’t verified this, and i’m not going to so.

ALifeToRemember@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 21:03 collapse

I had a look at this map and ifirc the problem is that the Minecraft books have a very small word limit. Only a few hundred words. You cannot even put a full article on a Minecraft book, let alone an actual book.

It was rather underwhelming to be honest.

KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 23 Jun 2024 00:45 collapse

yeah that sounds about right. Limiting engines be limited after all

Feliskatos@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 03:30 next collapse

I wish the cost of internet access decreased to match decreased available content. Internet shrinkinflation?

werefreeatlast@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 07:17 next collapse

With pacbell’s interwebs, you get 30 email addresses, and a free subscription to Yahoo’s front page!!! Hurry!

AFC1886VCC@reddthat.com on 22 Jun 2024 13:44 collapse

What you need is the innernette

youtu.be/Y5BZkaWZAAA

elxeno@lemm.ee on 22 Jun 2024 03:58 next collapse

<img alt="ia-ai" src="https://lemm.ee/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.imgflip.com%2F8umxoq.jpg">

Disaster@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 12:25 collapse

Yeah, kinda funny how it’s OK when there’s a bunch of neoliberal gangsters like larry summers behind it, right?

daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 08:18 next collapse

We live in a system that actively prevents humans to get more knowledge, go figure.

Zacryon@lemmy.wtf on 22 Jun 2024 08:35 next collapse

No one is preventing you from visiting a library, which would be a fesible alternative.

However, not a simple solution for everyone in every country. Knowlegde should be a free and shared common good.

daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 08:38 next collapse

Libraries where good for before the XXI century. Nowadays the amount of content they had is pretty small. Most libraries don’t really has anything but the more famous books.

Akrenion@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 11:01 next collapse

They became community hubs that offer more than just books. Even ebooks albeit that being weirdly capped by publishers as well.

They do much more than public opinion would make you believe.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 13:29 collapse

True, but that doesn’t change the fact that specific books can be hard to find. Libraries are great, but they don’t solve the problem IA solves.

Akrenion@programming.dev on 22 Jun 2024 16:34 collapse

We got a nationwide network of specific books. You can order books to your local library if you are a little patient. They might not have a lot of selfpublished books but that is a problem of scale and negotiating power of publishers.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 17:23 collapse

That’s pretty sweet! I grew up in an area with a county system, so you could get books from anywhere in the system (a dozen or so citires serving >1M people).

My current library is just our city, but I can go to a few other cities to check out books, but I can’t use holds there unless I pay $2-3/item to have it delivered to my library. We have a statewide ebook/audiobook network (serves 3-4M people), so that’s nice.

KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 17:07 collapse

i would fuck with public libraries if they had stocks of educational material, as well as communal spaces, which they generally do so.

01011@monero.town on 22 Jun 2024 09:03 next collapse

That depends on where you live. The Internet Archive is far more accessible than a good library, for much of the global populace.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 13:28 next collapse

And my library doesn’t have every book I want to read.

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 13:42 next collapse

He’s also a corrupt cop, but I repeat myself.

Meant to reply to the comment above yours.

Zacryon@lemmy.wtf on 22 Jun 2024 14:50 collapse

That depends on where you live.

Yes, I know. That’s why I said:

However, not a simple solution for everyone in every country.

kent_eh@lemmy.ca on 22 Jun 2024 15:18 collapse

It’s not even limited by country. There are far too many places in well resourced countries that don’t have access to good (or any) libraries.

Disaster@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 12:24 next collapse

Well, except scumbags like eric adams, NYC’s bought-owned-and-operated-by-real-estate-interests mayor.

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 13:44 collapse

He’s also a corrupt cop, but I repeat myself.

KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 17:06 collapse

No one is preventing you from visiting a library, which would be a fesible alternative.

actually blatantly wrong, public libraries are slowly dying and losing funding.

RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 11:55 collapse

We live in a system that monetizes everything, then seeks to restrict access to those things in order to profit.

Knowledge is just one casualty.

Aceticon@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 12:24 collapse

Scarcity is money and if there is no scarcity laws will be bought to to artificially create said scarcity.

T156@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 08:50 next collapse

The internet archive plans to appeal the ruling, so the fight is hardly over at this juncture.

Would be interesting to see where it goes.

ratzki@discuss.tchncs.de on 22 Jun 2024 11:28 next collapse

This means there is still time for data hoarders to react?

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 15:43 collapse

The Supreme Court and you know how they will rule.

HexesofVexes@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 08:55 next collapse

You know, this thread really needs a list of of the publishers responsible for this travesty.

“Publishers Hachette Book Group Inc, HarperCollins Publishers LLC, John Wiley & Sons Inc and Penguin Random House LLC” - According to Reuters

Dud@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 19:36 collapse

Of course those Penguin fucks are involved.

NutWrench@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 12:04 next collapse

There are a lot of books that are out of print, especially reference books. And if you look for them on Amazon or eBay, they’ve been snapped up by scalpers who are reselling them for obscene profit.

Either make the books available for sale or quit complaining about “copyright infringement.” But whatever you do, quit hoarding knowledge like a dragon sitting on a pile of gold.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 13:26 collapse

Exactly. Copyright should be nullified if there’s no longer first party sales.

We should also go back to the original copyright duration: 14 years with an optional, one-time extension for an additional 14 years.

rottingleaf@lemmy.zip on 22 Jun 2024 15:31 next collapse

Copyright should be nullified if there’s no longer first party sales.

Then everything created before now will compete with new copyrighted creations.

In a lobbied environment such a thing can’t exist.

Probably some elaborations about what exclusive rights can and can’t be should have been put into US constitution (because US is the main source of this particular problem, though, of course, it’ll be defended by interested parties in many other countries), but that was written a bit earlier than even electric telegraphy became a thing.

They really couldn’t imagine trying to destroy\outlaw earlier better creations so that the garbage wouldn’t have competition. Printing industry back then did, of course, have weight in making laws, but not such an unbalanced one, because the middle class of that time wouldn’t consume as easily as in ours (one could visually differentiate members of that by normal shoes and clothes), and books were physical objects.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 15:48 collapse

Yup, copyright wasn’t an issue because producing books was expensive enough to discourage copycats. The original copyright act I’m referring to was passed in 1790, which was actually passed a year before the Bill of Rights was ratified (you know, freedom of speech and all that). There was a lot of contention around the Bill of Rights, with many saying they were self-evident and didn’t need explicit protection, and I’m guessing the Copyright Act was similar in distinguishing what should be a regular law and what needs an amendment.

It was probably discussed in the constitutional convention, but probably dismissed since the constitution was intended to define and restrict government, not define what citizens can and cannot do. I think that’s the appropriate scope as well, I’m just sad that we’ve let the laws get away from us.

rottingleaf@lemmy.zip on 22 Jun 2024 16:57 collapse

I think that’s the appropriate scope as well, I’m just sad that we’ve let the laws get away from us.

I don’t.

You are right in the sense that it all comes down to the society having such laws or not having them (as in rioting till something changes?).

But in the sense of forces nudging these laws in one or another direction, anything that causes a constant one-sided drift when left to usual laws should be moved to constitutional ones.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 17:21 collapse

The only difference in the US code vs the Constitution is the difficulty of passing or revoking them, and we’ve done both (alcohol prohibition). That cuts both ways. Progressives will decry the 2A, and conservatives seem to hate the 14A, and both seem to hate the 1A (at least the speech bit).

What we should instead do is adjust the barrier to passing laws. It should reaquire 60% in the Senate to block a House bill, and it should pass with 40% support. Perhaps 60% should be required for the house as well, idk. There should also be limitations on the content of bills, so fewer omnibis bills and more smaller bills (one idea is to force legislators to swear under oath that they understand the bill). That should allow popular legislation to make it through easier.

Regardless, we need to overhaul our IP laws and return them to their original purpose: helping smaller creators to compete against larger players.

rottingleaf@lemmy.zip on 22 Jun 2024 18:31 collapse

There should also be limitations on the content of bills, so fewer omnibis bills and more smaller bills (one idea is to force legislators to swear under oath that they understand the bill). That should allow popular legislation to make it through easier.

That is the hardest problem to solve fundamentally IMHO. The package bills.

Which is why some people give up (or lose their mind) and become 'sovereign citizens" or ancaps.

aliteral@lemmy.world on 23 Jun 2024 14:01 collapse

If something does not sell anymore, automatically should go public domain or open source. Games, for example.

unrushed233@lemmings.world on 22 Jun 2024 13:53 next collapse

Sign the petition! Not sure if it is going to make any difference, but it just takes a couple of minutes. change.org/…/let-readers-read-an-open-letter-to-t…

Agent641@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 13:58 next collapse

I’m no computer scientist, but I have a suggestion:

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/779ae682-9bdc-4b8a-afe9-2544b343f705.png">

AgentGrimstone@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 17:12 collapse

Also change the folder name to “Homework”

lemmy_nightmare@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 17:31 collapse

My Homework is over 100GB

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 23 Jun 2024 00:28 next collapse

GB? Amateur.

HelloHotel@lemmy.world on 23 Jun 2024 00:43 collapse

100gb is about 20 dvds give or take.

You could fit thousands of books in that space however

uebquauntbez@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 15:15 next collapse

So OpenAI is next to stop using those too?

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 15:52 next collapse

No. That would involve the general public maintaining a consistent position.

I want knowledge to be free. That means free. That means governments, businesses, NGOs, your local church sewing circle, AIs/LLMs, refugees living in tents, convicts, children, and any other humans or human organizations or anything humans built.

I am willing to accept a LIMITED duration copyright and patent and private science publication system if it could be reformed such that it the brains behind it were paid and couldn’t legally sign away their compensation. Given that we as a society aren’t willing to build this the best course of action is to actively work to break copyright

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 23:03 collapse

Wouldn’t the attacks on openai be the same as these ones. Like if I was large media company wouldn’t I want my media to be vilifying AI because its the same principal and mechanism as training AI. They can kill two birds

TheReturnOfPEB@reddthat.com on 22 Jun 2024 15:52 next collapse

I hope they remove them like how Apple removed deleted texts.

lemmy_nightmare@sh.itjust.works on 22 Jun 2024 17:30 next collapse

😂

Dark_Dragon@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 22 Jun 2024 22:33 collapse

Also the “deleted images” years back from icloud

Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee on 22 Jun 2024 16:01 next collapse

If anyone wants my ebook library just let me know.

Agent641@lemmy.world on 23 Jun 2024 13:45 collapse

Ditto. I have everything from Apache web server guides to Apache helicopter service manuals.

Sam_Bass@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 17:06 next collapse

Hopefully they have an offline backup in storage somewhere for when the current shitshow ends

Colonel_Panic_@lemm.ee on 22 Jun 2024 21:57 next collapse

(Unplugs external drive)

“I deleted them.”

“You deleted all of them?”

“Yep, not on the website anymore. See.”

“Ok… Good… But I’m watching you.”

LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 22:13 collapse

Well they have no reason to delete them as they “own” the copy they have. They just need to take them offline until they get through the appeal or lose and have to keep them on a p2p torrent aspect instead of through their site. That sucks

MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 18:53 next collapse

Time to create some torrents? Let’s see them fight with the Netherlands on what’s seeding in Europe lol

yildolw@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 20:02 next collapse

The Internet Archive picked a dumb fight that it couldn’t win. I want to donate money to the Wayback Machine, but I can’t because they’ll spend it appealing this stupid thing.

RedditWanderer@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 21:59 collapse

So youve donated a bunch and now stopped? Right? Anakin?

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 22 Jun 2024 23:00 next collapse

That’s good. The internet is for advertiser’s and businesses. Its not for archives of information

cley_faye@lemmy.world on 23 Jun 2024 00:28 next collapse

Great, another victory of people keeping IP in closed box away from the public at the small cost of culture disappearing.

qwerty@discuss.tchncs.de on 23 Jun 2024 06:23 collapse

Have a look at ardrive and arweave permaweb.