A French court blocks a book piracy site
According to the French publishers’ association (SNE), piracy-facilitation sites drain revenue from many world markets’ book publishing industries.
The Paris Court has ordered Internet service providers to block the website (and associated domain names) of Z-Library, a piracy group. The result, according to the syndicate, is the inaccessibility of 209 domain names.
“Presenting itself ‘as a free library’ since 2009,” the publishers’ association says “but offering a paying model for access to counterfeit works, the Z-Library site—accessible via multiple addresses—offered access to more than 8 million books” across all editorial sectors “and 80 million pirated items.”
This latest success for the publishers, follows a criminal conviction for counterfeiting in May 2021 for managers of another outfit, TeamAlexandriz, deemed by the courts to be pirating content.
The collective success has closed at least these instances of an abiding and costly impediment to doing business and protecting copyrights, and it paves the way for the publishers to quickly and systematically block and de-reference Web sites that attempt to violate copyright protection.
“French publishing is investing massively to allow broad public access to digital books,” the publishers say. “Book piracy undermines the remuneration of creators, both authors and publishers. It poses a threat to the entire book ecosystem, particularly booksellers, and harms cultural diversity.
Source: Publishing Perspectives