commiegod ☭
4.4K posts

commiegod ☭
@CommieGod
who are you ignoring irl to stare at a screen rn?

AN ANONYMOUS DEVELOPER JUST BUILT A LIBRARY SO BIG IT MADE ELSEVIER'S LEGAL TEAM CRY. 99 million books and papers. Every shadow library on earth mirrored and searchable in one place. And it is completely unkillable. Here is the full story. In November 2022 US law enforcement seized Z-Library's domains and arrested its operators overnight. The largest ebook library on the internet was gone in 24 hours. A pseudonymous developer going only by Anna had already seen it coming. She had spent months quietly making full copies of every major shadow library before they could disappear. Sci-Hub. Library Genesis. Z-Library. Internet Archive. All of it backed up. Days after Z-Library fell Anna's Archive went live. Here is what makes it impossible to shut down. It does not host a single file. It indexes metadata and links to third-party mirrors. Legally there is nothing to seize. Technically there is no central server to take down. The entire codebase is open source. The entire dataset is distributed via torrents and IPFS. A decentralized file system where data lives across thousands of nodes simultaneously. If every domain gets blocked tomorrow anyone can spin up a new mirror in minutes from the same data. Italy blocked it. Germany blocked it. Publishers sued it. The US Trade Representative put it on their notorious markets list. It added new domains and kept going. What you get for free: 99 million books and academic papers. Sci-Hub, Library Genesis, Z-Library, and Internet Archive all searchable in one place. No account required. No subscription. No paywall. Download via IPFS, torrent, or direct link. Works across multiple mirror domains when one goes down. Elsevier charges universities $2 billion a year for journal access. One anonymous developer with a pseudonym and a backup drive just made that business model look embarrassing. 100% open source. annas-archive.gl Bookmark this before your next research session. Follow @cyrilXBT for every open source build that challenges the systems most people accept as inevitable.


Trump is the new McAfee $DELL

Something's totally off about the number of data centers being built (over 3,000 right now) and the sheer size and compute power they represent. They are massively OVER-building capacity that can't possibly be met by customer demand for compute. And customer revenues can't possibly recover the financial investment needed on these projects. There's clearly some other plan afoot, and I don't yet know what it is. It involves massive compute, but not merely to serve inference or hosting databases and corporate data. There's a much larger plan at work here.





















