"we needed none of these having for our comfort the holy Books, that are in our hands." —Maccabees 12:9
Quote from: justjeff on April 04, 2025, 01:15:12 PMTheir search engine has a selection of sites that they peruse, but Isidore.co is not one of them.LibGen already has most of the books from the Isidore.co library. Isidore.co is 6,192 books. It's tiny compared to shadow libraries' collections like Anna's Archive's 43,206,948 books.
Quote from: justjeff on April 04, 2025, 01:29:32 PMIt also looks like the google books link is no longer valid.I don't remember what palisadehealer had in that Google Drive link anyways.
Quote from: palisadehealer on September 20, 2021, 01:01:25 AMP.S. I was able to gather some more materials from friends... may I send them to you for as contribution to the collection of sound Catholic materials?
(There are also various books of cultural worth, but most of them are specifically concerned with understanding, living, and propagating the Faith.)
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1bIs0TAC1bS9HppLwvgCitgRkwN-78w9F?usp=sharing
Here is a link to the cloud storage where I've transferred them... I hope these may help many more souls! Again, thank you so much for all your kind work.
Quote from: deepseek-ai/DeepSeek-R1-Distill-Qwen-32BThe video provides an overview of Catholic groups skeptical of Vatican II, categorizing them into Una Cum and Sedevacantist groups. Here's a structured summary:
Una Cum Groups
- Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX): Largest traditional group, accepts the Pope but rejects parts of Vatican II. Uses the traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal), rejecting the Novus Ordo's viability.
- Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter (FSSP): Accepts Vatican II, uses both 1962 and pre-1955 Mass forms, viewing the Latin Mass as their specific charism.
Sedevacantist Groups
- Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen (CMRI): Rejects the current Pope, uses pre-1955 Mass, notable for The Singing Nuns.
- Society of Saint Pius V (SSPV): Rejects Vatican II, uses pre-1955 Mass, operates a YouTube channel and monastery.
- Roman Catholic Institute (ICR): Split from SSPV, similar beliefs, runs a school and uses pre-1955 Mass.
- Most Holy Family Monastery: Advocates "stay-at-home" sanism, rejects Church authorities.
Other Groups
- Old Catholic Churches: Split over Vatican I, now largely liberal, some more traditional.
- Independent Groups: Elect their own Popes, e.g., Palmarian Catholic Church with its own Missal, and former SSPX seminarian David Boden as Pope Michael.
This summary highlights each group's main beliefs, Mass practices, and notable features, providing a clear overview of the discussed Catholic groups.
Quote from: Tony on December 10, 2022, 04:24:09 PMNot sure if this is a dead thread, but howdy y'all!
I'm Tony, a Catholic seminarian. Been using Calibre and helping out others at the seminary I go to with ebooks and stuff for our classes.
Thank all y'all that have helped us learn more.
Sancta Dei Genitrix - Ora Pro Nobis
QuoteCopyright reform is necessary for national security
annas-archive.li/blog, 2025-01-31 — companion articles by TorrentFreak: first, second
TL;DR: Chinese LLMs (including DeepSeek) are trained on my illegal archive of books and papers — the largest in the world. The West needs to overhaul copyright law as a matter of national security.
Not too long ago, "shadow-libraries" were dying. Sci-Hub, the massive illegal archive of academic papers, had stopped taking in new works, due to lawsuits. "Z-Library", the largest illegal library of books, saw its alleged creators arrested on criminal copyright charges. They incredibly managed to escape their arrest, but their library is no less under threat.
When Z-Library faced shutdown, I had already backed up its entire library and was searching for a platform to house it. That was my motivation for starting Anna's Archive: a continuation of the mission behind those earlier initiatives. We've since grown to be the largest shadow library in the world, hosting more than 140 million copyrighted texts across numerous formats — books, academic papers, magazines, newspapers, and beyond.
Me and my team are ideologues. We believe that preserving and hosting these files is morally right. Libraries around the world are seeing funding cuts, and we can't trust humanity's heritage to corporations either.
Then came AI. Virtually all major companies building LLMs contacted us to train on our data. Most (but not all!) US-based companies reconsidered once they realized the illegal nature of our work. By contrast, Chinese firms have enthusiastically embraced our collection, apparently untroubled by its legality. This is notable given China's role as a signatory to nearly all major international copyright treaties.
We have given high-speed access to about 30 companies. Most of them are LLM companies, and some are data brokers, who will resell our collection. Most are Chinese, though we've also worked with companies from the US, Europe, Russia, South Korea, and Japan. DeepSeek admitted that an earlier version was trained on part of our collection, though they're tight-lipped about their latest model (probably also trained on our data though).
If the West wants to stay ahead in the race of LLMs, and ultimately, AGI, it needs to reconsider its position on copyright, and soon. Whether you agree with us or not on our moral case, this is now becoming a case of economics, and even of national security. All power blocs are building artificial super-scientists, super-hackers, and super-militaries. Freedom of information is becoming a matter of survival for these countries — even a matter of national security.
Our team is from all over the world, and we don't have a particular alignment. But we'd encourage countries with strong copyright laws to use this existential threat to reform them. So what to do?
Our first recommendation is straightforward: shorten the copyright term. In the US, copyright is granted for 70 years after the author's death. This is absurd. We can bring this in line with patents, which are granted for 20 years after filing. This should be more than enough time for authors of books, papers, music, art, and other creative works, to get fully compensated for their efforts (including longer-term projects such as movie adaptations).
Then, at a minimum, policymakers should include carve-outs for the mass-preservation and dissemination of texts. If lost revenue from individual customers is the main worry, personal-level distribution could remain prohibited. In turn, those capable of managing vast repositories — companies training LLMs, along with libraries and other archives — would be covered by these exceptions.
Some countries are already doing a version of this. TorrentFreak reported that China and Japan have introduced AI exceptions to their copyright laws. It is unclear to us how this interacts with international treaties, but it certainly gives cover to their domestic companies, which explains what we've been seeing.
As for Anna's Archive — we will continue our underground work rooted in moral conviction. Yet our greatest wish is to enter the light, and amplify our impact legally. Please reform copyright.
- Anna and the team (Reddit, Telegram)
Read the companion articles by TorrentFreak: first, second
QuotePotency and Act so divide being that whatsoever exists either is a Pure Act, or is necessarily composed of Potency and Act, as to its primordial and intrinsic principles.Lumbreras, O.P., commentates:
QuoteEvery actual subsisting being—inanimate bodies and animals, men and angels, creatures and Creator—must be either Pure Act—a perfection which is neither the complement of Potency, nor the Potency which lacks further complement—or Potency mixed with Act—something capable of perfection and some perfection fulfilling this capacity. This statement is true both in the existential and in the essential order. In each of these orders the composition of Act and Potency is that of two real, really distinct principles, as Being itself; intrinsic to the existing being or to its essence; into which, finally, all other principles can be resolved, while they cannot be resolved into any other.
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