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Text Content

NEW: 500,000 books are gone from the Archive. Demand their return!


BATTLE FOR LIBRARIES

On Friday June 28, 2024, the nonprofit Internet Archive is appealing a judgment
that threatens the future of all libraries. Big publishers are suing to cut off
libraries’ ownership and control of digital books, opening new paths for digital
book bans and dangerous surveillance.

Join 30,000+ signers on the petition below to defend the Internet Archive,
libraries’ digital rights, and an open internet with safe, uncensored access to
knowledge.





33,277 signatures


BATTLE FOR LIBRARIES


TARGET: BIG PUBLISHING SHAREHOLDERS

SIGN THIS PETITION

First Name
Last Name
Email *
Zip/Postal Code *
Not in NL? Country * Afghanistan Aland Islands Albania Algeria American Samoa
Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba
Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium
Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia, Plurinational State of Bonaire, Sint
Eustatius and Saba Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British
Indian Ocean Territory Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia
Cameroon Canada Cabo Verde Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile
China Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia Comoros Congo Congo, the
Democratic Republic of the Cook Islands Costa Rica Côte d'Ivoire Croatia Cuba
Curaçao Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic
Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Falkland
Islands (Malvinas) Faroe Islands Fiji Finland France French Guiana French
Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana
Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guernsey Guinea
Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Heard Island and McDonald Islands Holy See (Vatican
City State) Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran, Islamic
Republic of Iraq Ireland Isle of Man Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jersey Jordan
Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic
of Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon Lesotho
Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macao North Macedonia
Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique
Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Mexico Micronesia, Federated States of Moldova,
Republic of Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar
Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger
Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands Norway Oman Pakistan Palau
Palestine, State of Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Pitcairn
Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Réunion Romania Russian Federation Rwanda
Saint Barthélemy Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Saint Kitts and
Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Martin (French part) Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia
Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Sint Maarten (Dutch part)
Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia and the
South Sandwich Islands South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Svalbard and
Jan Mayen Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syrian Arab Republic Taiwan Tajikistan
Tanzania, United Republic of Thailand Timor-Leste Togo Tokelau Tonga Trinidad
and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu Uganda
Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States United States Minor
Outlying Islands Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of
Viet Nam Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands, U.S. Wallis and Futuna Western
Sahara Yemen Zambia ZimbabweNetherlands Why is the Internet Archive important to
you? I am a librarian I am an author
Comments
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Sponsored by: Fight for the Future



FAQ


HOW CAN I SUPPORT THE INTERNET ARCHIVE AND LIBRARIES’ DIGITAL FUTURE?

Big Media’s lobbyists have been running a smear campaign trying to paint the
Internet Archive as a greedy big tech operation bent on stealing books—which is
totally absurd. If you’ve ever used the WayBack Machine, listened to their
wonderful archives of live music, or checked out one of their 37 million texts,
it’s time to speak up. With publishing revenues approaching 30 billion per year
in the US and monopolistic consolidation among publishing corporations, the
publishing industry is incredibly powerful and moves aggressively to silence
dissent. 

The Internet Archive’s determination to keep fighting is a big deal! 

Here are ways to support:

 1. Sign the petition above.
 2. Join 25+ major civil and human rights organizations in calling for a
    congressional investigation into surveillance and erasure in digital
    books—efforts that the Internet Archive is actively fighting against—at
    https://www.battleforlibraries.com/congress/ 
 3. Sign the Internet Archive’s petition calling on publishers to restore
    500,000 books that have been removed from the Archive due to the lawsuit:
    http://letreadersread.com/
 4. Share your story about how having half a million books removed from the
    Internet Archive has impacted your reading or research—either on X or via
    this form.
 5. Post about why you love the Internet Archive and give them a tag. Please
    share with your community why this institution is important to you. Use the
    hashtag #DigitalRightsForLibraries!
 6. Invite your friends here, to BattleForLibraries.com, and ask them to sign
    the petition, too!
 7. Help spread the word! Click on any of the images below to download and set
    as a temporary profile picture.


WHAT’S HAPPENING?

The Internet Archive has been scanning millions of print books that they own,
and loaning them out to anyone around the world, for free. Other libraries like
the Boston Public Library are using the same process to make digital books too.

This is happening because major publishers offer no option for libraries to
permanently purchase digital books and carry out their traditional roles of
preservation and protecting patrons’ human right to privacy. 

Instead, libraries are forced to pay high licensing fees to “rent” books from
big tech vendors that regard patron privacy as a premium feature (or disregard
it entirely, seeking to profit from patron data). Such licensed books are also
uniquely vulnerable to censorship from book banners and erasure. 25+ major civil
and human rights organizations including the Athena Coalition, Color of Change,
Reproaction, MediaJustice, UltraViolet, Presente.org, Institute for Local
Self-Reliance, The Greenlining Institute, Woodhull Freedom Fund, the
Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, and more recently called for a
federal investigation into the harms of these practices. Library ownership of
digital books is a principled and important value for the future of reading.

It is clear that under today’s regime, major publishers act as malicious
gatekeepers, preventing the free flow of information and undermining libraries’
ability to serve their patrons. They do this in the name of their authors, who
increasingly disagree with the premise of the lawsuit as they watch record
publishing profits translate into more money for shareholders and CEOs—and less
for authors and publishing workers.

Major publishers know it would look bad to sue the Boston Public Library. So
instead, they’re attacking a groundbreaking nonprofit via a lawsuit with clear
repercussions for every library in the US. On March 24, 2023, a lower court
judge issued a (frankly terrible) ruling that stated the profits of big media
companies are more important than the right of libraries to preserve our history
and ensure it’s available to the world. Then, in a copyright troll move for the
ages, the same attorney representing Big Publishing filed a second absurd
lawsuit against the Internet Archive for its research library of old music
recordings.

Nevertheless, the Internet Archive is appealing to a higher court and will keep
fighting for the digital rights of libraries and readers in oral arguments on
Thursday, June 28, 2024.


HOW DOES LIBRARY PRESERVATION OF DIGITAL BOOKS PREVENT CENSORSHIP, AND WHY IS
THAT IMPORTANT?

It is just as important to preserve digital books as paper books, especially
given the rising popularity of digital books and the fact that many local and
diverse voices are not published in print at all. 

Today, most digital books can only be licensed, meaning there is effectively
only one copy of a digital book and it can be edited or deleted at any time with
zero transparency. In this scenario, profit-motivated big publishing
shareholders for companies like Newscorp, Amazon, and Disney are in control of
whether a book is censored or not. 

But big publishers wouldn’t walk into a library and steal books off the shelves,
and they also wouldn’t hack into a library’s computers and delete books. This is
why it’s important that libraries actually own digital books, so that thousands
of librarians all over are independently preserving the files of important
books. This kind of decentralized curation makes books more resilient to
censorship, keeping them available to the public and unaltered.


HOW DOES LIBRARY PRESERVATION OF DIGITAL BOOKS PREVENT PATRON SURVEILLANCE, AND
WHY IS THAT IMPORTANT?

Increasingly, big publishing is turning into big tech, and seeking to make data
on readers, students, and library patrons their next big product. Today, in
order to loan digital books, libraries are forced to use third party tech
vendors like Overdrive’s Libby, Elsevier’s ScienceDirect, or Hoopla. Often,
these tech vendors spy on readers.

Libraries are legally forbidden from choosing a surveillance-free loan system
for digital books because they don’t own the files they’re loaning. Without
ownership, libraries will always be subject to the whims of big publishing and
big tech, and get bullied into trading away the safety of their patrons for
access to digital books.

Libraries have historically defended the right of their patrons to read without
being spied on—a right that is increasingly important today as privacy rights
are rolled back nationwide in the US, and asserting one’s bodily autonomy is
criminalized in many states. Allowing tech corporations (and everyone who buys
data from them, such as advertisers, law enforcement, and vigilantes) to harvest
the names and locations of anyone who reads a book on reproductive or
gender-affirming care is, at its core, a betrayal of the library’s promise to
give readers of all kinds a safe place to learn.


WHAT’S THE NEXT STEP IN THE LAWSUIT?

Publishers are arguing that it is not okay to scan a copyrighted book, keep the
paper copy in storage, and loan out the digital file in a one-to-one ratio just
like any library loans any other kind of book. This practice is called
Controlled Digital Lending. In 2023, a New York judge sided with them, putting
profits before fair use and the rights of libraries.

On June 28, 2024, oral arguments will be heard in the Internet Archive’s appeal
of that decision. In the weeks or months to come after the oral arguments, the
appeals court will issue a new decision.

The Internet Archive legally can’t disclose any information about what’s
happened behind closed doors so far, but we do know that over half a million
books in their collection aren’t available to the general public anymore.

Thankfully, the battle isn’t over. Both sides seem ready to take this fight over
the right to own digital books all the way to the Supreme Court.


WHAT DO AUTHORS HAVE TO SAY ABOUT THIS?

For a while, many authors were confused about what’s happening and what it
means. Big publishing lobbies have told them many…interesting…things. But as the
implications for libraries’ rights become clear, more and more authors are now
condemning this lawsuit and other anti-library actions from publishers. 

It’s understandable for authors to be confused, after all, publishing lobbyists
spend millions every year to try and pull the wool over all our eyes. But there
are still some good people in publishing, including Neil Gaiman, Hanif
Abdurraqib, Chuck Wendig, Naomi Klein, and 1000+ more authors who are deeply
done with drinking publishing lobbyists’ kool-aid.

You can read the letter to big publishers from 1000+ authors at
https://www.fightforthefuture.org/Authors-For-Libraries


WHAT IS THE INTERNET ARCHIVE?

Most people know the Internet Archive because of the Wayback Machine, which is
essential infrastructure of the internet. It’s an archive of the history of the
internet with 700 billion pages.

In a similar way, the Internet Archive’s library provides an archive of
out-of-print, midlist, local, and diverse texts in addition to popular books. 37
million of them. And anyone with an internet connection can check out whatever
they’d like to read.

This initiative is similar to the Brooklyn Public Library’s youth censorship
circumvention efforts—but the Internet Archive’s library is accessible to
everyone around the world, not just youth in the US. The Internet Archive’s
digital books also are used for citations on Wikipedia, underpinning yet another
core digital public good.


WHAT IS FLAMING HYDRA/BRICK HOUSE COOPERATIVE AND HOW ARE THEY INVOLVED?

The Brick House is a writers’ and artists’ cooperative dedicated to digital
ownership rights and to the preservation of libraries and the independent press.
We publish the Flaming Hydra newsletter and a number of independent blogs. The
cooperative can’t be bought or otherwise influenced from the outside; our work
can’t be controlled by owners or investors, because there aren’t any.

As publishers, we sell our ebooks to libraries for keeps, and our new BRIET
project will give other publishers and libraries free access to the same tools
and techniques we’ve developed for ourselves, so that they too can sell—not
license—their digital works to libraries.

We recognize that the Internet Archive is a great library—and so much more.
Taken together, the Archive’s many initiatives and resources are our best hope
for preserving freedom of information into the digital future. Please join us in
supporting them.


WHAT IS FIGHT FOR THE FUTURE AND WHY ARE YOU DOING THIS?

Fight for the Future is a feisty, queer women led digital rights organization.
Our work resisting censorship, advocating for free speech and expression,
demanding big tech accountability, and promoting antitrust legislation speaks
for itself, so feel free to check it out.

We’re here because this has gotten scary. The folks over at the Internet Archive
are nerdy librarians and archivists working at a small nonprofit. They’re so far
from the Big Tech “mouthpieces” that high-paid publishing lobbyists want you to
think they are. And it’s time someone stood up for the totally essential and
badass work they’re doing, as well as the future of all libraries. So, here we
are.


WE <3 THE INTERNET ARCHIVE

> "The idea of universal access to all knowledge is an amazing dream and the
> fact that there is now some people that have been crazy enough for 25 years to
> try to collect it all and put it together so anyone can access it freely at
> any time...this is so powerful and so important."

— Peter Gabriel, Musician & ActivistThe Internet Archive Is Making Wikipedia
More Reliable— Wired

> “I flat-out owe my career as a trans author to the unimpeded circulation of
> digital books: the first trans books that inspired me were digital, my own
> first books were published digitally. Book stores didn’t carry our books at
> first. Therefore, any readers that have felt their own emotions changed by my
> published work–no matter in what medium–ultimately also owe that change to
> digital books. Everybody benefits when digital books are accessible.”

— Author, PEN/Hemingway award winner, and first trans woman nominee for the
Women’s Book Award Torrey Peters

> "The Internet Archive is a library, and, like any library, it is allowed to
> scan the books in its collection and circulate them to its patrons."

— Author Cory DoctorowA major publishing lawsuit would cement surveillance into
the future of libraries— Fast Company

> "Back in the 1990s, I was a rock n' roll historian and I wrote the liner notes
> for compact discs...It's just such a thrill now to have all this on the
> Internet Archive and I'm very grateful to those making it possible."

— Dawn Eden Goldstein, Author

> "The suit raises the threat level and the public anxiety that’s always
> surrounded the Internet Archive. If the archive were to die by a thousand
> legal cuts or a solar flare, hardcopies could rot in shipping containers; code
> would simply vanish."

— Whitney Kimball, Gizmodo

> "About 2 years ago, my wife Julie died of breast cancer after a five year
> struggle. As part of the process of remembering and reliving her life, I
> decided to collect all the photos and digital items that I could find...I had
> to really go out and find it. I used the Wayback Machine.....I'm eternally
> grateful for the services I found at the Archive."

— Paul Lindner

> "A few years ago, I started working with a Japanese American historical
> organization called Densho, and we decided to pull together the very best
> books about the Japanese American incarceration and to digitize them. Now
> anyone can go t the Internet Archive and check out that book or flip through
> its pages. It's a way of bringing this story into the future."

— Wendy Hanamura

> "It’s the height of hypocrisy for publishers to attack a basic thing that
> libraries have done for centuries: lending out books that they own for limited
> periods of time to support the spread of knowledge"

— Mike Masnick, Tech CrunchYou Can’t Buy These Books— The Nation

> “Libraries and librarians are champions of both the under-served reader and
> the under-seen writer. I used to work in the public library, and I cherished
> that the library helped writers find readers, and readers to find writers —
> and writers of every level, to boot, from midlist or bestseller or debut. It
> is vital we make sure these seeds are planted, watered, and allowed to grow
> unhindered.”

— Author Chuck Wendig

> “Without libraries my peers and myself wouldn’t have had the access to
> literature that we identify with and encouraged us to tell our own stories. To
> restrict their abilities to loan books is to stifle voices like ours “

— Poet Yesika Salgado

> "The role of this institution as a steward of cultural posterity is unmatched
> and crucial for the survival of our civilization."

— Maria Bustillos, Journalist & Activist

> "Owning media is now an act of countercultural defiance."

— Max Collins, Eve6

> "The Archive is such a phenomenal resource. It is so critically important in
> our current environment of information glut and fleeting but profoundly
> impactful content. It has been invaluable to my team as a tool."

— Renee DiResta, Stanford Internet Observatory

> "It's been such an amazing resource for me and so many journalists over the
> years... We've used them for countless stories, every single day."

— Andrew Kaczynski, CNN Reporter

> “When I heard Marygrove was going to be closing, it broke my heart...When they
> told us they were going to be digitizing the library, I didn't exactly know
> what that meant. Actually seeing it now—this was a stroke of genius. This
> Internet library stuff is a pretty good idea.”

— Valerie Deering, Marygrove College alumna & poetDigital book burning': San
Francisco's Internet Archive battles lawsuits from book publishers— SFGate

> “The Internet Archive saved my library in the best way possible. I hope
> millions of people will use it [to research] space, architecture, costumes,
> towns, cities, administration, foreign countries… the crime business!
> Westerns! That’s what is amazing to me, that it will be open to everybody.”

— Lillian Michelson, founder, Michelson Cinema Research LibraryMythbusting
Controlled Digital Lending— Library Futures

> "I own two of the Julian books in multiple copies at school, but I couldn't
> get all those books to people [during covid lockdowns]. That's why I sought
> out the Internet Archive....To me it was a matter of survival. Children need
> books and nothing is going to stop me from getting stories to them."

— Mary Moore, Elementary School Teacher

> "As an autistic person, it was a life-changing experience for me to borrow a
> book to read on my phone. I actively use the collections to aid my school work
> - sometimes it's explained in different words that help me understand more.

— Jacob, Student, Poland

> "I don't have much money to spare for books, so your website and others like
> it are my lifeline to the world of self-education. I feel very grateful. Long
> live the democratization of knowledge.

— Aidan, Farmer, Ireland

> "I use the Internet Archive because I have difficulty handling physical
> books...During 2020, my university library was closed because of COVID-19. I
> could access recent publications online but not older material that is only
> available through Internet Archive."

— Graham, Professor Emeritus, Onatrio, Canada

> “Internet Archive helped me help a student! I have students in one class that
> attend from around the globe. One student was unable to find the required
> texts and our university did not have digital copies that could be lent. If
> she were to order the book – not carried in any local stores – it could take
> up to 3 months for them to arrive, long after the course was over!”

— Lisa M., Educator, EnglandBillion Dollar Book Companies are Ripping Off Public
Schools— New Republic

> “Even before the pandemic, depending on the topic of my essay and thesis, it
> was difficult to find books on certain topics in local libraries or
> bookstores…Access to knowledge shouldn’t be for the rich and privileged.”

— Claudia G., Researcher, Romania

> “I’m a Digital Librarian in a public library in the small town of Hokitika,
> New Zealand, whose job is making local history more accessible to the
> community – many of the New Zealand history works in our public library
> collection are rare or reference-only. It turns out many works of New Zealand
> history have been digitised by the Internet Archive from US collections”

— Mike D., Librarian, New Zealand

> “As a non-academic with interests in literature, history, and philosophy, the
> IA gives me access to books I can’t otherwise afford or access.”

— Callum H., Yard operative, Scotland

> “I spent months of 2020 bed-ridden, and was able to view items from your
> digitized collection. I would not have been able to go to any physical place
> for my books, and the titles I was looking for were sometimes available only
> on the Internet Archive. There are no other means for me, in my part of South
> America, to have access to limited-circulation ancient newspapers of other
> continents without digitizing and digital libraries. Without the Internet
> Archive and other libraries like it, I would have no alternatives.”

— Yuri L., Educator, Brazil

> “Living in a developing country with so many political and economic turmoils,
> I believe that the Internet Archive provides a huge service and a unique
> platform for dissolving the injustice and inequality of [access] to knowledge
> between disadvantaged countries and classes.”

— Simay K., Researcher, Turkey

> “I’ve used materials from the Internet Archive many times throughout my time
> as an undergrad studying history…There are many primary and secondary sources
> on the IA that I was unable to find anywhere else online or in physical copies
> through my university’s library. Many of the books I’ve accessed through the
> IA have been out of print for many years, so it’s incredibly helpful to have
> [access] to titles that would otherwise be nearly impossible to track down.“

— Lydia S., Student, Canada

> “I am surprised that books pertaining to learning the Urdu language are
> available on archive.org, and those which were used for preparation in the
> civil services. These books are just not available in the country anymore and
> are immeasurably useful as far as the history of the colonized area is
> concerned. These are not published anymore, and finding a copy is exceedingly
> rare. This is why archive.org is important and we should endorse and support
> it.”

— Shehroze A., Educator, Pakistan

> "Teachers are desperate for any and all help right now and luckily our
> communities and beyond are coming to the front lines to help advocate for us!
> We really appreciate all you have done to help us!"

— Erin S., 6th Grade Teacher, Sacramento, CA

> "Thank you for working on behalf of those of us who are promoting literacy,
> even through difficult times."

— Anne Papiano, Media Specialist

> "My students could not finish the semester without the National Emergency
> Library. It has been a total lifesaver. Not for books that are “in print”
> electronically. My library has been buying those. But for all the 30 to
> 50-year-old books that are out of print but essential for doing good history
> research."

— Tyler Anbinder, History Professor, George Washington University

> "I think the Internet Archive has the moral high ground in launching the
> National Emergency Library. There’s no way people who already contributed to
> paying for access to books through taxes or tuition can individually purchase
> every book they might want to consult while the libraries they relied on (and
> helped to fund) are closed. We need to consider the public good in this
> crisis.”

— Barbara Fister, Author & Librarian

> “We didn’t imagine something like the Covid crisis could happen, but for our
> preservation efforts, this is the Big One. We are really lucky to be able to
> provide access to information that we couldn’t otherwise without the Internet
> Archive.”

— Peter Scholing, National Library of Aruba

> "Working toward educational equity should be core to the mission of every
> school. By supporting resource access, instructional rigor, and special needs
> access, tools like the Internet Archive’s digital libraries can help schools
> move toward this essential goal."

— Michelle Swanson, educator and national educational specialist

> “I used the National Emergency Library for personal reading through the
> pandemic. I am a high-risk person for [COVID-19], so I have been very limited
> for the last three months. I am also disabled and cannot easily visit the
> library even when it is open to check out books. I’ve relied on the Internet
> Archive for many years to find things to read to help me occupy my time when I
> can’t do much of anything else but read.

— Andrea N., Freehold, New Jersey, Reader:

> “I think people really underestimate the importance of accessibility in
> educational materials. It’s very difficult to understand the impact something
> you don’t have access to *could* have. Much easier to take for granted the
> things we already have access to, thinking it is so for everyone.”

— Mirrah, Student from Sunderland, Massachusetts

> “The ability to read in the safety of my home is priceless because I have an
> autoimmune disease.”

— Tori K., Oxnard, California, Reader

> "I was able to find basic life support manuals (BLS Provider Manual) needed by
> front line medical workers in the academic medical center I work at."

— Benjamin S, Librarian

> ‘The Internet Archive has been a godsend for my students at Santa Clara
> University this quarter—especially with all libraries and interlibrary loan
> services closed. My students wrote sophisticated research papers on a variety
> of subjects during spring quarter. The Internet Archive was a major factor in
> their success."

— Kathleen S, Professor, Santa Clara University

> "I think in the end, [Controlled Digital Lending] drives sales because you are
> finding readers you wouldn’t normally have. Those readers aren’t getting a
> copy that they keep forever — it’s a copy that’s going to lead them to want to
> own it."

— Jason C. McDonald, author and publisher, AJ Charleson Publishing

> "Here, because digital technology is involved, the publishers are asserting
> that they can control how/when/where/why libraries lend out digital copies.…
> In other words, they want to change the rules in their favor and take away one
> of the most cherished and valuable contributions that libraries make to
> society—allowing members of the public to read for free from the library’s
> collection.”

— Jason Schultz, co-author of The End of Ownership; NYU Law Professor

> "Libraries — a backbone of American democracy, and the ones best poised to
> respond to the existential threat of misinformation — need to be able to
> overcome those barriers to protect our democracy."

— Meredith Rose, Public Knowledge

> “The Internet Archive is an invaluable, indispensable asset for researchers,
> all three of its core features: archived sites, archived files, and books that
> can be borrowed.”

— Thomas Rid, Professor, Johns Hopkins University

> “Libraries are “palaces for the people,” as the title of Eric Klinenberg’s
> book says so well. They are learning spaces, safe spaces, caring spaces,
> public spaces. They allow members of the public to see themselves as equal to
> others and welcomed into this space. Libraries’ ability to collect, preserve,
> and share resources is a sine qua non of democracy. Bullies who pick on
> libraries are anti-democratic.”

— Author and Guggenheim Fellow Patricia Aufderheide

> “Libraries were a formative part of me learning to read, and they should be
> free for all forever.”

— Bestselling Author Matt Forbeck

> “Copyright has in the past century been twisted to benefit corporations and
> other businesses, not creators and their estates, nor libraries who serve a
> public interest. It is high time to review how we have turned our system away
> from allowing the spread of knowledge while ensuring artists get duly paid
> into one where the wealthy extract endless rent from the hard work of others
> and limit public access to that knowledge.”

— Author Jeffery M. Reynolds

> “Libraries are a vital institution to cultivate engaged readers. Allowing them
> to carry books in formats that readers actually use only helps authors. Not
> allowing libraries to function puts the control of reading into the hands of
> big tech companies.”

— New York Times bestselling author Scott Carney

> “Libraries are the guardians and the bulwark of cultural diversity and
> inclusion, particularly for those who don’t have the means to access culture
> by other pathways. They are the place where people, particularly children, can
> access books and other materials about the topics that concern them, embarrass
> them, or that they don’t feel that they can talk with anyone else. The status
> of libraries as a place free of censorship and surveillance, to seek knowledge
> we need and stories that reflect us, is one of the keystones of a free, open,
> and democratic society, and every inch that we lose in this battle contributes
> to the disintegration of civic space.”

— Author Marianne Díaz Hernández

> “I write because I want to be read. My most recently published book is on the
> Internet Archive—and that delights me. I also make use of online archival
> material frequently in my creative and critical work. Moreover, as a college
> administrator in a small-island state (or, more accurately, a Big Ocean
> Nation), I know how important electronic resources are to global access and
> equity.”

— Author Elizabeth Kate Switaj

> “It’s absolutely shameful that publishers would try to destroy the efforts of
> the Internet archive. The future is open access publishing!”

— Author, and Faculty Affiliate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet &
Society Sasha Costanza-Chock

> “Closing off libraries to fair access in the digital age closes off one of the
> most important tools for research we have. The Internet Archive’s controlled
> digital lending approach is an excellent way to quickly research topics from
> primary sources that may not have digital equivalents. The library should be
> allowed to reasonably keep up with the times, and we should not allow
> publishers to attempt to redefine it just because the format is changing.”

— Author Ernie Smith

For press inquiries, please contact us at:
(508) 474-5248 or press@fightforthefuture.org

All other inquiries, contact:
team@fightforthefuture.org



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