I’m putting this together because I posted a while ago about using IRC to acquire ebooks on Reddit, and there was a metric shit ton of interest from others in learning how to do it. Much of this info is available on the net, but it can be difficult to track down if you don’t know exactly what to look for.
Disclaimer: I am in no way responsible for how you choose to use this knowledge. This method can and should only be used to download legally available ebooks, as an alternative source in case other services go down for whatever reason. You use this guide at your own discretion.
Now then, to the good stuff.
Q&A
Question: Why should you use IRC to acquire ebooks, there are so many different ways to get them!
Answer: IRC is the best method to find ebooks. The quality is almost always high, the selection is extensive, and finding and downloading the books is quick and easy. Put simply, unless you happen to have access to a private site exclusively made for ebooks, you probably won’t find a better source.
Question: What do I need to make this happen?
Answer: A IRC client (I’ll be using mIRC for the purposes of this guide, it’s the simplest to use and the most widely distributed as well. Besides that, the ability to copy and paste, and a bit of common sense.
Setup
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Now then, to begin, download a IRC client. I personally suggest mIRC.
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Once you do that, install it and open the client up. You should be greeted with a page like This.
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The first thing you want to do is write in a name that’s unique enough to have not already been taken. For the purposes of this guide, I just choose something random.
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Once that’s done, you want to navigate down to “Ignore” section in the DCC options, and turn the box option to “disabled”. This is to ensure that incoming files are not ignored, which is important if you actually want to receive your ebooks. Example
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Next thing you want to do is scroll back up to the “Servers” tab and pick out a server. For ebooks, I know of two servers that host channels dedicated to ebook downloads. One is “Undernet”, the other is “IRChighway”. While both have their uses, IRChighway is the one you want to use 90% of the time. The selection is generally more robust, the channels are more stable, and the downloads are faster. You generally only want to use Undernet if you can’t find the ebook you’re looking for on IRChighway. Sometimes you can get lucky and one will have a book if the other does not. In any case, select you server by finding it in the drop down menu and double clicking it. Example
Actually finding and downloading your ebooks
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Once you’ve done that, it’ll take you back to the menu that I originally showed you. This time, click the connect button, and it’ll connect you to the server and open a window offering you a chance to join a channel. Now, there are several channels you can join depending the server you’re on. On Undernet, you can either go with “Bookz” or “ebooks”, while on IRChighway, you can join “ebooks”. Type in your channel and hit join. Example
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Once you’ve done that, you’ll be presented with a channel window filled with a whole bunch of people typing in seemingly meaningless strings of text, none of them talking to one another. This can be intimidating, but don’t worry, it’s not hard to figure out! It’s at this point that you need to know the commands to properly utilize the channels bots.
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When you join one of the channels I listed, there will be channel bots you’ll use to interact with the bots that you will be downloading from. To access the commands for these bots, use the “@” symbol followed by the command you need.
To search for an ebook, Use
@Search <book name or author name>
This will have the channel bot automatically search through it’s index and return you a listing of the books available from the download bots in the channel. It will look like this. As you can see, I searched for Romeo & Juliet, and the bot went through its index and returned a list of potential downloads. Click the accept button to have it download.
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Once you’ve done that, go into the upper portion of mIRC, click tools, and go to the “received files” drop down. Click it. Example
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This will open up your mIRC downloads folder, which should contain a .zip file of the list of download options that the bot sent you. Extract it and open it up in notepad. There will be a variety of download links available in many different formats. Find whichever book you’re looking for, in whichever format you prefer (I like HTML because they’re generally the best formatted and the format is universal for mobile devices) and copy the text string up til the the end of the file. Example
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Once you’ve done that, go back to the mIRC channel window and simply paste the text string into the channel. Example
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Click enter, and wait for the bot to respond, and then click accept when a file transfer window comes up. I’ve highlighted my download query, and the bots response with relevant information for you. It should be pretty self explanatory. Example
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And you’re done! The file will be downloaded to your mIRC downloads folder in a zip or rar archive. Simply extract it and read it!
Note 1: You can also use the command
@find <book or author name>
To search for your ebook if the channel bot is down or not responding quickly to the @search command. However I do not suggest this, as it gives you a clusterfuck of responses in your IRC client as personal messages. It can work, but only as a last resort. Example
Note 2: I’ve used the public domain “Romeo And Juliet” for the purposes of this guide. This book is in the public domain, and thus is not subject to any copyright. Once again, I encourage you to only download public domain books, but cannot control (and am not responsible) for what you wish to download.
Note 3: Edit. Damnit, Reddit fucked the formatting and keeps renumbering my list. Whatever, not a big deal I guess. It doesn’t change the content of the guide at all. Just go down the list, everything is in the proper order anyway.
So, that’s how you download ebooks off of IRC. Not so hard, is it? I hope you find this helpful, I promised this to more than a few people months ago, and I finally got around to it.
instead of mIRC, use hexchat, it’s open source and free
Does HexChat support mIRC scripts? Because there’re some EXCELLENT scripts for mIRC that makes using the ebook channels bearable and even easier.
I can also recommend library genesis: https://libgen.is
Libgen is great for popular books, but the above guide is amazing for finding basically anything else. I’ve often needed to load up IRC to find more obscure books.
Where do those books even come from? And why do the people not just contribute them to libgen instead of locking them behind some obscure tech?
No idea where they’re coming from, but people have been exchanging files on IRC files for year, why stop now? The obscurity of it is probably the only reason it’s still around, it will never get enough attention for traffic to overload the servers, and nobody will bother trying to hit them with lawsuits.
Libgen for the win. https://libgen.rocks/ is fantastic as well. I think it’s the same source material but a little easier to search
Saved this from r/piracy as it’s a fantastic guide and deserves to be archived
Been meaning to repost this since it’s been one of my favourite guides but got distracted, as usual. Thanks for doing this!
I can recommend Anna‘s Archive and Standard Ebooks, both are great sources!
Yeah I was going to say, just use Anna’s archive
Thanks for the recommendations. I’ll add these to my list
There’s a docker container called openbooks, which provides a great GUI for this process too: https://evan-buss.github.io/openbooks/
no shit man, this is fucking awesome. That’s going on my list to set up on my NAS
well for me a NAS is going on my list.
I’ve just got around to giving this a whirl it’s pretty good. They have binaries for those like myself afraid of docker
any idea how to get this working on synology? the docker compose in the guide doesn’t work at all for me. No idea what to do
I tried it, but it’s nothing special to be honest… I can find and download all of those just by searching google or any other search engine.
And for folks for whom that method doesn’t find everything they want, this guide will prove to be helpful
Even better than libgen?
I don’t know if I’ve ever not found a book on libgen, maybe I should read more.
Maybe in English but it is a tad more complicated to search other languages.
yeah I remember when I was a kid I used to do this
Very well written guide. We need more content like this!
I missed this kind of stuff when Reddit cracked down but didn’t realize until now
I remember reading and using this exact guide on reddit! Made it very simple.
Thank you for your service 🙏
Before I try it out, does anyone know how the selection is for non english stuff?
Tons of French stuff. not sure about other languages
Damn I used IRC a lot 20 years ago but mostly for the lols and getting laid. I even met my wife on IRC and we celebrated our 8 years wedding anniversary a month ago.
But I didn’t knew you can find ebooks, that is great thanks a lot for saving this guide. I guess it’s time to reinstall an IRC client.
Using IRC to get laid? incredibly based
Downloaded my first mp3 and my first pirated movie from IRC. DCC bots were the jam back in the day.
Appreciate that this guide only encourages the downloading of public domain books, but what is the current thinking on the ethics of downloading non public domain books?
Anna’s archive, for example, seems to have lots of content arguing that copyright is morally wrong - or something along those lines…
I can’t speak for everybody. As far as I’m concerned I will pay for the ebooks if they’re available and don’t have extortionate prices. I would buy exclusively digital books if I could – unfortunately local publishers are still slow to catch up to the notion, so finding ebooks in other languages than English is a chore.
But I will always remove the DRM from ebooks, so I can archive them in alternative formats which never expire and can be adapted as needed to different devices. Calibre is great for format conversions (including DRM removal).
If anyone ever needs to choose between books and food, they should be able to choose both.
This is old school! Great guide, thank you.
Gotta appreciate windows 7 though.