dantescanline

joined 1 year ago
 

" I run Anna’s Archive, the world’s largest open-source non-profit search engine for shadow libraries, like Sci-Hub, Library Genesis, and Z-Library. Our goal is to make knowledge and culture readily accessible, and ultimately to build a community of people who together archive and preserve all the books in the world ... In this article I’ll show how we run this website, and the unique challenges that come with operating a website with questionable legal status, since there is no “AWS for shadow charities”."

[–] dantescanline@lemmy.fmhy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

basically torrent quality tends to be higher and also people will actually be seeding stuff so you can download it. this is enforced by having each user's seeding tracked and you get kicked off the system if you don't keep a good ratio.

[–] dantescanline@lemmy.fmhy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

on my private tracker you get points for just always seeding, you can turn those points in for ratios boosts at a pretty good rate.

[–] dantescanline@lemmy.fmhy.ml 14 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Yeah it's the issue with this 'middle ground' of federation. some ideal world would be fully p2p, identities fundamentally would rest with the user's device or backed up somewhere public and encrypted, then servers just become meeting hubs or caches of content. there's some protocols that already do this at a technical level, secure scuttlebutt and nostr are two. there's other issues that crop up, for one moderation and content discovery starts to be a lot more complicated.

so, not a solved problem by any means, but federation at least gives us a bit more freedom than a singular centralized service.

[–] dantescanline@lemmy.fmhy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Sorry I should have explained more. It's definitely on the philosophical side but he's been living in a self constructed and worked on boat for decades, a true DIY-er in that sense. Maybe it's actually a little too far out as it's not a singular project so feel free to remove if you want.

 

Paul Johnson sailed the world all his life. He loved, drank, and lived foolish, never truly living on land. Now he is turning eighty. What is at the end of such a journey? Is there loneliness?