The initial core was a massive dump of Russian-language scientific books and journals. Then, volunteers from the /sci/ board of 4chan and later Reddit's r/Scholar began uploading. They wrote scripts to scrape JSTOR, Elsevier, and Springer. They digitized entire university reading lists. By 2010, LibGen held over 500,000 books. By 2015: 2 million.
The administrators were ghosts. They communicated via encrypted chats. They had one rule: No current-year commercial fiction. LibGen was not for stealing Stephen King novels. It was for knowledge. Textbooks, monographs, journal archives, conference proceedings, standards manuals—the infrastructure of human learning. gen.lib.rus.esc
A retired professor in the UK, after his university revoked his alumni library access: "I now use LibGen to download my own papers." The initial core was a massive dump of