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Anna's Archive is an open source search engine for shadow libraries that was launched by the pseudonymous Anna shortly after law enforcement efforts to shut down Z-Library in 2022. The site aggregates records from major shadow libraries including Z-Library , Sci-Hub , and Library Genesis , among other sources.
[4] [5] [6] California author Jonathan Littman wrote a 1996 book about the case called The Fugitive Game: Online with Kevin Mitnick, in which he presented Mitnick's side of the story, which was a very different version from the events written in Shimomura and Markoff's Takedown. [4] In his book, Littman made allegations of journalistic ...
[63] [52] [64] Days after the law enforcement action, a group of anonymous archivists launched Anna's Archive, a search engine that provides access to the contents of Z-Library and other shadow libraries. [65] [66] Many other workarounds to the recent attempts to take down Z-Library have been reported.
Track Down (also known as Takedown outside the United States) is a 2000 American crime thriller film based on the non-fiction book Takedown: The Pursuit and Capture of Kevin Mitnick, America's Most Wanted Computer Outlaw—By the Man Who Did It by Tsutomu Shimomura and John Markoff, about the manhunt for computer hacker Kevin Mitnick.
A large proportion of our books are too long to render and a good chunk of the rest have things like navboxes breaking the renderer and even if it in theory should work I've had times were it randomly stop or I can't download the book for unexplained reasons.
Open Library is an online project intended to create "one web page for every book ever published". Created by Aaron Swartz, [3] [4] Brewster Kahle, [5] Alexis Rossi, [6] Anand Chitipothu, [6] and Rebecca Hargrave Malamud, [6] Open Library is a project of the Internet Archive, a nonprofit organization.
How to Break a Terrorist: The US Interrogators Who Used Brains, Not Brutality, to Take Down the Deadliest Man in Iraq is a 2008 book written by an American airman who played a key role in tracking down Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Around October 2007, Archive users began uploading public domain books from Google Book Search. [98] As of November 2013 [update] , there were more than 900,000 Google-digitized books in the Archive's collection; [ 99 ] the books are identical to the copies found on Google, except without the Google watermarks, and are available for ...