According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Russian nationals Valeriia Ermakova and Anton Napolsky were arrested in Argentina on November 3 and charged with criminal copyright infringement in addition to money laundering and wire fraud. The Russians are allegedly the architects of the popular textbook piracy platform, Z-Library.
The e-book pirates are accused of illegally profiting from stolen textbooks, which were frequently uploaded hours after first publication. This practice hurt authors as well as publishers and legitimate booksellers.
More Than 200 Z-Library Web Domains Seized
While the duo was being arrested, U.S. officials seized their sizable network of 249 web domains, which were interrelated. This shuttered access to Z-Library and its estimated 11 million e-books for users not as web-savvy, although more experienced dark web travelers were still able to access the site. This suggests that the pirate book site was slowed down rather than completely stopped.
A Likely History of Copyright Infringement
While the legal indictment focuses on the pair’s alleged illegal activity between the years 2018 and 2022, the assistant director in New York’s FBI field office states that they may have been operating a piracy site for more than a decade, in violation of federal copyright laws.
Intellectual property theft deprives its victims of well-deserved revenue, and the FBI is committed to going after pirates to shut down these illegal platforms.
FBI Waiting for Extradition
If charged, Ermakova and Napolsky will have to forfeit property that was obtained either directly or indirectly because of their crimes. According to TorrentFreak, Argentina has yet to receive an extradition request from the U.S. for the Z-Library principals, but that is the next step in the efforts to shut the site down permanently.
TikTok Hashtag Brings Down Pirates
Since 2009, Z-Library has been the go-to source for millions of free e-books. But when Z-Library started trending on TikTok, authors stepped up their complaints. The Author’s Guild reported the issue to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representatives, pointing out the popularity of TikTok hashtag #zlibrary among high school and college students, and other users, eager to find free e-books. The hashtag was seen by 19 million TikTok users. They also shared impact statements from authors.
The Future of Pirated Textbooks
Although many students have lost their favorite source, for the time being, this doesn’t mean that online e-book piracy is vanquished. There are other e-book piracy sites, such as the Library Genesis Project (Libgen), which the feds are also aware of. Z-Library could also reappear in time through new domain names. For now, though, authors have had a small victory in the ongoing copyright battle.