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Scribd raises $9M in Series B, hires Bebo COO, and new marketing VP

33 points| jasonbentley | 17 years ago |techcrunch.com | reply

17 comments

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[+] wesley|17 years ago|reply
Love the site, but they seriously need to clean up the amount of illegal ebooks being shared.

I mean, http://www.scribd.com/search?query=wrox&x=0&y=0 says it all doesn’t it.

Wouldn’t even be hard to filter this out, anything uploaded over 200 pages should be investigated.

Ofcourse, much of their growth may come from these illegal downloads (we don't know)... So until they start getting complains, they'll probably let it slide: the youtube way.

Edit: what the... I posted this comment on techcrunch a few hours ago, and now I recheck the search results, all 600+ ebooks seem to have disappeared.

No matter, just search for something else. Plenty of examples still. Seems they deleted this quickly perhaps because of the comment, but are not addressing it globally.

[+] jasonbentley|17 years ago|reply
Your good intentions are well appreciated, but Scribd is the only site of its kind with a working copyright filter that has to check every single document uploaded against literally tens of thousands of document “thumbprints.” If you had any idea of the amount of content that is blocked, you would take a less condescending attitude toward the uphill battle we fight against illegal activity.

There are literally hundreds of copies of Stephenie Meyer books (”Twilight”, etc) that are blocked EVERY DAY, same with Harry Potter, dummies books, etc.

Sure, someone’s going to run a query and find an exception and will post their ‘gotchas’ here. And yes, everyone has an opinion about what Scribd should be doing to combat infringing users. And someone will upload a copyrighted book, and will post their “See?! They STEAL!!” comments before the copyright filter finds it. They always do.

But the fact is Scribd is doing far more than any of our competitors in this area. We have a far more responsive and effective copyright policy than any of our competitors. As a result, Scribd has more deals with major publishers than any of our competitors.

[+] ig1|17 years ago|reply
I imagine it's exactly the youtube way. Bootstrapping from illicit content to legitimate content. scribd is probably the second biggest repository of illegal books online (after irc book bots) and probably the easiest to use.
[+] sachinag|17 years ago|reply
Ha, it's zero docs, but it still says 658 up in the tab. It's a cat-and-mouse game and I certainly don't envy them.

Congrats fellas and ladies!

[+] rp|17 years ago|reply
They probably qualify for the DMCA safe harbor so one of the few incentives to act are complaints. Also, one can assume they are getting complaints given the volume of documents they host.
[+] Corrado|17 years ago|reply
Actually I can't stand to read documents on Scribd. I would much rather just gave the PDF to view instead on an in-browser type of thing. In fact I am looking into removing it from all my searches because it's gotten to the point of me just closing the tab when u realize it's a Scribd page. :/
[+] marketer|17 years ago|reply
What's wrong with the flash viewer? I've rarely had any problems with it, and it loads document fairly quickly.
[+] jcapote|17 years ago|reply
They need to seriously get rid of that flash viewer or at least provide a link to a real pdf.
[+] wesley|17 years ago|reply
You need to register, then they provide you with the option of downloading the PDF.