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I dread these. I still remember the rarbg announcement from a few years back I saw here. Do I even dare click the link?
This is surprising. I thought last I heard they'd arrested the guy who was suspected of running the site, about a year or so ago. Guess I'm misremembering.

Also I'm surprised Cloudflare hasn't shut them down like they do for other dodgy sites.

The entire internet needs to be re-designed to stand up against attacks.

- DDOS attacks

- Spamming

- UK like surveillance laws

- LLM scraping

Why is it that there is almost not initiative for this?

Openai need to train their models based on these books, not stackoverflow or reddit.
Anna's archives is possibly the greatest site ever.

Infinite love to the team <3

(comment deleted)
Please remain up. Libgen no longer works. I've used IRC for fiction and non-fiction but tech books needs Anna's Archive and Libgen. I buy the physical with company budget to pay the author but I need DRM free ebooks to read comfortably on my Tab S9 Ultra.
fuck those guys, annas archive is one of the last good things about the internet.
annas-archive.li/blog, 2025-08-17

About recent events.

We are still alive and kicking. In recent weeks we’ve seen increased attacks on our mission. We are taking steps to harden our infrastructure and operational security. The work of securing humanity’s legacy is worth fighting for.

Since we started in 2022, we have liberated tens of millions of books, scientific articles, magazines, newspapers, and more. These are now forever protected from destruction by natural disasters, wars, budget cuts, and other catastrophes, thanks to everyone who helps with torrenting.

Anna’s Archive itself has organized some of the largest scrapes: we acquired tens of millions of files from IA Controlled Digital Lending, HathiTrust, DuXiu, and many more.

We have also scraped and published the largest book metadata collections in history: WorldCat, Google Books, and others. With this we’ll be able to identify which books are still missing from our collections, and prioritize saving the rarest ones.

Much thanks to all of our volunteers for making these projects happen.

We’ve forged some incredible partnerships. We’ve partnered with two LibGen forks, STC/Nexus, Z-Library. We’ve secured tens of millions additional files through these partnerships. And they are helping the mission by mirroring our files.

Unfortunately we have seen the disappearance of one of the LibGen forks. We don’t have further information about what happened there, but are saddened by this development.

There is a new entrant: WeLib. They appear to have mirrored most of our collection, and use a fork of our codebase. We have copied some of their user interface improvements, and are grateful for that push. Sadly, we are not seeing them share any new collections, nor share their codebase improvements. Since they haven’t shown commitment to contributing back to the ecosystem, we advise extreme caution. We recommend not using them.

In the meantime, we have some exciting projects in the works. We have hundreds of terabytes in new collections sitting on our servers, waiting to be processed. If you’re at all interested in helping out, feel free to check out our Volunteering and Donate pages. We run all of this on a minimal budget, so any help is greatly appreciated.

Keep fighting.

Kudos to the team behind this project! It looks like they have improved UI in last year. The crucial problem right now is to remain accessible or to survive. I have no idea how much effort is being put into it. I wonder is it possible to remain afloat despite all efforts to take them down?
> We recommend not using them

I've been using WeLib since April and had a good experience so far

Shadow libraries maintainers deserve a Nobel prize for their contributions to humanity. Satoshi would be proud.
"Anna’s Archive itself has organized some of the largest scrapes: we acquired tens of millions of files from IA Controlled Digital Lending"

Not really helping in the big picture, here, guys.

Just curious - What is the future of service like these? More and more content will be AI generated, to some degree. And should thereby that content be aggregated?
Can Anna's Archive claim to be a non-profit when it's effectively an illegal enterprise with unknown controllers?

They are even offering decent bounties: https://software.annas-archive.li/AnnaArchivist/annas-archiv...

Whoever is running it must be doing really well for themselves laundering all that crypto.

Also interestingly they don't offer a tor onion service, while the admin is most certainly technically competent to administer one given that he no doubt uses tor to insulate himself from his enterprise and launder crypto. What is the reasoning for that?

> In recent weeks we’ve seen increased attacks on our mission.

A pretty rich thing to say when your mission is piracy.

I'm not against piracy at all, quite the contrary, but this is quite laughable.

It is literally bringing knowledge to several dis-privileged people across the world who would have otherwise not had any access to it. It's a work of the lord if there ever was any.
Does anyone have discreet pointers for downloading all the data? What format is it usually?
Also how can one totally anonymously pay them?
People like this, because people like free stuff, and like to rationalize getting free stuff. Occasionally, someone who likes free stuff styles themself a freedom fighter, though their values do not otherwise seem to extend beyond getting free stuff.

Some AI company techbros like this data trove even harder, and limit their pretending to publicly saying things like "we're changing the world" (and "AI could be bad if you don't give us money and lock out competitors") but really only care about wealth and power.

Certain sanctioned countries that culturally value literature and science might also appreciate this. (This last category, I'm much-much more sympathetic to, and wish them well in their intellectual pursuits and appreciation of the humanities, though we should really find a better way to share that doesn't undermine Western economies and many people's livelihoods.)

I choose the books I buy, from Anna's Archive. I choose the comics I buy from readComicsOnline. I choose the [european] graphic novels I buy from #WONTTELL.

And I am one of the best customers of these 3 physical shops, in my town.

So sure, I don't buy the latest trends based on ads. I investigate a lot to buy GREAT stuff. Sometimes the shopkeeper has headaches to find the obscure stuff I discovered online that NOBODY knows it exists.

Am I an exception?

I don't know but those services are great to maintain a freedom of choice.

I'll often read books from Anna's Archive, and if I like them, buy physical copies from Bookshop.org for rereading and for shelf trophies.
Isn't it humorous how citizens are pro Anna's archive, but governments are against it? Bit of additional evidence for elitism and such.