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There’s More to Copyright Than Financial Incentives, Internet Archive Argues in Court
(torrentfreak.com)
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As I said, the "traditional" CDLs were also in a legal grey area. But once the publishers are suing IA for going full Library Genesis anyway, why not also include those?
I went back to one of the older articles I could find on this subject, from before the lawsuit was filed. Some particularly-relevant excerpts:
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Ironically the FAQ that Internet Archive put online has been taken down, but I found it in their Wayback Machine. It says:
So it seems pretty clear to me that by "suspending waitlists" it means that they're going to "lend" more copies simultaneously than they actually have.
The Internet Archive had been poking a bear with a stick for years and the bear had been grumbling but not otherwise responding. So they decided to try giving it a whack across the nose with the stick instead. Normally I'd just sigh and shake my head at their stupidity, but they're carrying a precious cargo on their back while they're needlessly provoking that bear, and now they're screaming "oh no my precious cargo! Help me!" While the bear has a firm grip on their leg. That makes me extra frustrated and angry at them for doing this.
I'm not siding with the bear here, I should be very clear. The publishers are awful, the whole concept of copyright has become corrupt and broken, and so on and so forth. But the Internet Archive isn't supposed to be fighting this fight. They were supposed to be protecting that precious cargo, and provoking the bear is the opposite of doing that.