The Open Library doesn't share books, but
only seeks to create a "web page for every book ever published". It is
volunteer-crafted, and depends on volunteers to reach its goal. You can
create a webpage for any book too.... Aaron Swartz sadly suicided at a
very early age, because his ideas of sharing knowledge were in conflict
with those being pushed by law and commercial interests today.
Open Library is an online project intended to create "one web page for every book ever published".
Created by Aaron Swartz, Brewster Kahle, Alexis Rossi, Anand
Chitipothu, and Rebecca Hargrave Malamud, Open Library is a project of
the Internet Archive, a nonprofit organization.
The
Internet Archive shares full-texts of books, mostly copyright-expired
ones, or those shared by their authors/publishers/copyright holders. It
has also made the argument that loaning books online should be like
those loaned by a library -- one given out at a time, for each copy
bought. See https://archive.org/ Names like Brewster Kahle figure in both... hat tip to the Indian/
desi names on the list, who appreciated the importance of sharing.
The Internet Archive is
an American non-profit organization founded in 1996 by Brewster Kahle
that runs a digital library website, archive.org. It provides free
access to collections of digitized media including websites, software
applications, music, audiovisual, and print materials.
Not to be missed out is what seems like the grandiloquently-named The Million Books Project
The
Million Book Project (or the
Universal Library) was a book digitization project led by
Raj Reddy at
Carnegie Mellon University School of Computer Science and University Libraries from 2001 to 2008. Working with government and research partners in
India (
Digital Library of India) and
China, the project scanned books in many languages, using
OCR
to enable full text searching, and providing free-to-read access to the
books on the web. As of 2007, they have completed the scanning of 1
million books and have made the entire catalog accessible online.
Everyone
once saw this as a conspiracy to grab the knowledge of the world. Dr
Reddy is getting there, if he hasn't already reached. Today, thanks to
him, many Goa-related copyright-expired books are available online too.
(Many, many other books too, far beyond Goa, in so many languages.)