Free dissemination of knowledge that benefits the advancement of mankind should never be illegal.
- You have all the official addresses, I recommend using the Tor network 
- just go to https://z-lib.gs/ . idk wdym by “why”… - Officer trying to be under cover 
- Did you maybe miss the linked article? :D - was there an article linked at first? - weird, i don’t think there was one when i was writing from my phone lol. 
 
 
- Lol - Free dissemination of knowledge that benefits the advancement of mankind should never be illegal. In fact, Z-Library being illegal is immoral. That being said, I simply use Z-Library to inspect books before purchasing them. Translations from different authors are often remarkably different. Sometimes books have horrible layout. So yeah, Z-Library has been indispensable to avoid wasting money. Case in point, part of the first paragraph of Dostoevsky’s House of the Dead, the Dover versus Penguin edition - If z library only contained actual knowledge sure, but it seems to be primarily fiction. But no it’s immoral because the author likes to save money and not go to a physical store. - I like piracy too but saying that banning piracy is immoral and comparing it to apartheid, slavery and ccolonialism is just ridiculous. - “I like piracy too but saying that banning piracy is immortal and comparing it to apartheid, slavery and ccolonialism is just ridiculous.” - When one puts it like that it sure does seem ridiculous, but to me it is obvious that the analogy I am making is purely the fact that something being illegal does not mean it’s immoral. - That’s true but in the context it puts a very bad taste in my mouth. - I really don’t understand why people think they have a moral right to other people’s creations. - “I really don’t understand why people think they have a moral right to other people’s creations.” - That’s a straw man fallacy. That statement removes all the always important context you just alluded to, a statement which was never claimed. - I like that you brought it up though, the original remark, a bit sardonic but that’s okay. It keeps me aware of my own potential generalizations, assumptions, fallacies, and whatnot. - “I really don’t understand why people think they have a moral right to other people’s creations.” - That’s a straw man fallacy. That statement removes all the always important context you just alluded to, a statement which was never claimed. - In the articles this is being claimed: - Free dissemination of knowledge that benefits the advancement of mankind should never be illegal. In fact, Z-Library being illegal is immoral. - You say that it’s immoral that Z-Library is illegal. The purpose of Z-Library is arguably to provide people with copyrighted content for free. I.E Other people’s creations. - Please tell me what important context I’m missing. To me it honestly just seems like you want someone else’s stuff for free and are just brining up morally in a misguided way to achieve that. Wanting free shit is great, I support that. Pirate all you want. But it isn’t about morality. - P.S. isn’t bringing up the straw man fallacy a straw man fallacy itself? Some people have started to say that every argument they disagree with is essentially a straw man fallacy. - To me it honestly just seems like you want someone else’s stuff for free and are just brining up morally in a misguided way to achieve that. - The article clearly mentions my use of Z-Library is to inspect before I buy. Now, because of being misrepresented twice, the discussion ends here. - I have already addressed that in my original comment. - Go to a store. - Just because you wanted to inspect people’s creations in a way that suites you better doesn’t make banning piracy fundamentally immoral. - the discussion ends here. - Sounds great. It’s honestly no use arguing with idiots. 
 
 
 
 
 
 




