this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2024
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[–] FaceDeer@fedia.io -3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

The IA did not have books that were currently in print and they also told publishers that if they found any that were in print that were uploaded, they would be removed.

Again from Wikipedia:

The 127 publishers' books in the suit are also available as ebooks from the publishers.

And from the section on the settlement reached:

On August 11, 2023, the parties reached a negotiated judgment. The agreement prescribes a permanent injunction against the Internet Archive preventing it from distributing the plaintiffs' books, except those for which no e-book is currently available,[3] as well as an undisclosed payment to the plaintiffs.

If you're going to accuse me of lying I would appreciate if you took a little more care to ensure your own statements were truthful.

Too bad that U.S. copyright law doesn't recognize CCLs or you'd have a point.

That's a flat "what." From me. Creative Commons licenses depend on copyright to function. In what way does US copyright law "not recognize" Creative Commons licenses?

[–] FlyingSquid@lemmy.world 8 points 5 months ago (1 children)

It does not recognize CCLs because there is no legal mechanism in place to recognize them. They depend on copyright to function in the sense that copyright allows them to function in the nebulous grey area in which they exist and it hasn't been challenged yet.

Because, again, terrible PR.

Also, I accused you of lying when you said this:

The lawsuit was the result of bear-poking. It’s a result of their “National Emergency Library” that they briefly rolled out in 2020 where they took all the limits off of their “lending” and let people download as many copies as they wanted. Was “legitimate academic study” not possible before, with the old limits that weren’t provoking lawsuits?

Because the lawsuit wasn't the result of that, the lawsuit created a window of opportunity for publishers to do something they wanted to for years and sue them for something unrelated to that. Which you claim you knew. It's victim-blaming because I'm sure you also know that they would have been sued eventually regardless of what they did or did not do.

So yeah, that makes what you said a lie by your own admission.