, 2009–2022 Early predecessors to shadow libraries were informal collections of unauthorized digital copies of books, scholarly literature, and other textual media, often shared with small groups via
mailing lists,
forums, or social media websites. Online communities of scientists also collaborated to share paywalled literature among themselves. '' and photo negatives of unofficial literature Many shadow libraries originate in Russia, which has a rich history of
samizdat stemming from the
Soviet era. There was strict
state censorship and control of print materials, which gave rise to the dissident activity of copying and disseminating censored or underground works. Even after the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of the official censorship program, these sharing practices continued as a result of widespread economic hardship. Texts were widely digitized and shared on Russian
FidoNet systems as computer and internet access became more widespread in Russia. One early collection of digitized texts was
Maksim Moshkow's 1994
Lib.ru. The Russian
Kolkhoz collection, named for the
kolkhoz collective farms, was created by a community that worked in the early 2000s to download or digitize scientific texts, which they stored on FTP servers and DVDs. This collection eventually grew to around 50,000 documents. Some of these early collections later became shadow libraries as they attracted volunteer librarians who catalogued the archives' contents. Early academic shadow libraries in the 2000s included Textz.org,
Monoskop, and
Gigapedia (later Library.nu). Gigapedia focused more on academic texts than other shadow libraries, which mainly contained literature. Around 2006 or 2007, it incorporated the files amassed by the Kolkhoz collectors, and had become the largest shadow library by 2010. Gigapedia, by then renamed to Library.nu, was shut down in 2012 through a lawsuit from a coalition of seventeen publishing companies including
HarperCollins,
Oxford University Press, and
MacMillan. Library Genesis (also known as LibGen) was founded in approximately 2007 or 2008 by a group of Russian scientists, who began by organizing a collection of Russian science and technology texts made available on a torrent site, aggregated from sources including the Kolkhoz collection and lib.ru. In 2011, LibGen absorbed the Library.nu collection, keeping it accessible even as Library.nu was forced to shut down. At the time, LibGen was unique in its focus on its open library infrastructure, prioritizing the free sharing of its collection, catalog, and source code to encourage many others to increase shadow libraries' collective resiliency by
mirroring and
forking the project. As of 2025, Library Genesis "claims to have more than 2.4 million non-fiction books, 80 million science magazine articles, 2 million comic files, 2.2 million fiction books, and 0.4 million magazine issues." == Motivation ==