December’s Immaculate Coldness Feels Warm. December Feels Like Blood.

December’s immaculate coldness feels warm. December feels like blood.

— Zinaida Gippius

More Posts from Gulliblenacho and Others

3 months ago

how does being punched in the face feel like

5 months ago
EMMA D'ARCY As RHAENYRA TARGARYEN HOUSE OF THE DRAGON 2.05 "The Regent"
EMMA D'ARCY As RHAENYRA TARGARYEN HOUSE OF THE DRAGON 2.05 "The Regent"
EMMA D'ARCY As RHAENYRA TARGARYEN HOUSE OF THE DRAGON 2.05 "The Regent"

EMMA D'ARCY as RHAENYRA TARGARYEN HOUSE OF THE DRAGON 2.05 "The Regent"


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5 months ago
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air
I Promise You, I Was Here , I Felt Things That Made Death So Large It Was Indistinguishable From Air

I promise you, i was here , i felt things that made death so large it was indistinguishable from air - and i went on destroying inside it like wind in the strom.


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5 months ago
Time Is Eternity For Those Who Love

Time is eternity for those who love


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8 months ago
Why a ruling against the Internet Archive threatens the future of America’s libraries
MIT Technology Review
The decision locks libraries into an ecosystem that is not in readers' interests. Congress must act.

Libraries have traditionally operated on a basic premise: Once they purchase a book, they can lend it out to patrons as much (or as little) as they like. Library copies often come from publishers, but they can also come from donations, used book sales, or other libraries. However the library obtains the book, once the library legally owns it, it is theirs to lend as they see fit.  Not so for digital books. To make licensed e-books available to patrons, libraries have to pay publishers multiple times over. First, they must subscribe (for a fee) to aggregator platforms such as Overdrive. Aggregators, like streaming services such as HBO’s Max, have total control over adding or removing content from their catalogue. Content can be removed at any time, for any reason, without input from your local library. The decision happens not at the community level but at the corporate one, thousands of miles from the patrons affected.  Then libraries must purchase each individual copy of each individual title that they want to offer as an e-book. These e-book copies are not only priced at a steep markup—up to 300% over consumer retail—but are also time- and loan-limited, meaning the files self-destruct after a certain number of loans. The library then needs to repurchase the same book, at a new price, in order to keep it in stock.  This upending of the traditional order puts massive financial strain on libraries and the taxpayers that fund them. It also opens up a world of privacy concerns; while libraries are restricted in the reader data they can collect and share, private companies are under no such obligation. Some libraries have turned to another solution: controlled digital lending, or CDL, a process by which a library scans the physical books it already has in its collection, makes secure digital copies, and lends those out on a one-to-one “owned to loaned” ratio.  The Internet Archive was an early pioneer of this technique. When the digital copy is loaned, the physical copy is sequestered from borrowing; when the physical copy is checked out, the digital copy becomes unavailable. The benefits to libraries are obvious; delicate books can be circulated without fear of damage, volumes can be moved off-site for facilities work without interrupting patron access, and older and endangered works become searchable and can get a second chance at life. Library patrons, who fund their local library’s purchases with their tax dollars, also benefit from the ability to freely access the books. Publishers are, unfortunately, not a fan of this model, and in 2020 four of them sued the Internet Archive over its CDL program. The suit ultimately focused on the Internet Archive’s lending of 127 books that were already commercially available through licensed aggregators. The publisher plaintiffs accused the Internet Archive of mass copyright infringement, while the Internet Archive argued that its digitization and lending program was a fair use. The trial court sided with the publishers, and on September 4, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reaffirmed that decision with some alterations to the underlying reasoning.  This decision harms libraries. It locks them into an e-book ecosystem designed to extract as much money as possible while harvesting (and reselling) reader data en masse. It leaves local communities’ reading habits at the mercy of curatorial decisions made by four dominant publishing companies thousands of miles away. It steers Americans away from one of the few remaining bastions of privacy protection and funnels them into a surveillance ecosystem that, like Big Tech, becomes more dangerous with each passing data breach. And by increasing the price for access to knowledge, it puts up even more barriers between underserved communities and the American dream.

11 September 2024


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6 months ago

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gulliblenacho - conifers
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