• insufferableninja@sh.itjust.works
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    23 hours ago

    There’s a private tracker called MyAnonamouse, all ebooks and audiobooks. They have open registration sometimes. I let my account lapse or I would shoot you an invite

  • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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    23 hours ago

    Libgen. Not torrents but books are all over.

    Also audiobooksbay, you don’t actually need an account for these torrents if you take the hash from the site

  • MacStainless@piefed.social
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    20 hours ago

    Just use your local library and get all the books you want for free and in the most legit way possible. No idea why you feel the need to pirate books.

    • dgdft@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      I respect the spirit you’re going for, but FYI, Libby/Overdrive are private-equity owned and just as exploitative (if not more so) than the major publishers were.

      Libby does not give libraries an unlimited license for digital books, but rather makes them pay what they would for a physical book, and allows them to loan out the digital copy a relatively small number of times (usually around ~4-5 IIRC) under the guise that a physical book would have been irreparably degraded after that amount of use. There’s a stream of billions of dollars being moved from non-consenting taxpayers going right to a monopolistic gatekeeper.

      If we’re talking physical books, libraries are definitely still great for that, but I find that the vast majority of the time I look to check if they have a specific book I’m after, there are zero physical copies anywhere in the system, and all the digital “copies” are already “checked out”. E.g., I went looking for a copy of PKD’s Valis last week, and my options were: library audiobook (vomit), wait two weeks for a “checked out” digital copy from the library (vomit), buy from Amazon (vomit), or sail the seas.

      So no, that’s a shitty substitute — libraries have been co-opted into an extractive, for-profit system and utterly perverted into a shell of what they were in the 20th century.

      • MacStainless@piefed.social
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        15 hours ago

        That may be true but until a better solution for ebook lending exists, libraries in their current form using Libby / Overdrive is still an enormous public benefit and is a direct service from local taxes that benefits humanity.

        I don’t agree with Overdrive’s practices but I absolutely don’t hold libraries accountable for that because they can’t control what the market offers.

    • unphazed@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      Problem is the wait lists. Cosmere books in my area are on an approximate 18wk wait. Audiobooks nearly double.

    • RaivoKulli@sopuli.xyz
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      19 hours ago

      My library makes people use shitty apps for ebooks and audiobooks instead of using whatever reader/player you want

      • MacStainless@piefed.social
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        15 hours ago

        That’s not their fault. Libby / overdrive is what the market offers. If a library wants to loan digital books, that’s the answer. This is a competition and marketplace and monopoly problem. Not a library problem.

        • RaivoKulli@sopuli.xyz
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          14 hours ago

          I wasn’t assigning blame, I was just giving a reason some don’t want to use the library offerings