Despite legal setbacks, the Libgen community maintains a decentralized network of "mirrors" and proxies. Users typically find current access points through community-driven platforms like the r/libgen subreddit or dedicated uptime monitors. Current active mirrors often include: libgen.is libgen.st libgen.li Alternatives to Libgen
Accessing research that was otherwise locked behind expensive institutional subscriptions.
Genlibrusec was the primary URL for , a massive digital database of scientific papers, academic textbooks, and general-interest fiction. The domain extension .rus.ec reflected the site's early operational roots in Russia and Ecuador. For years, it served as the go-to portal for:
On , a U.S. judge ordered the operators of Libgen to pay $30 million in damages to publishers, leading to the seizure of several key domains, including the "library.lol" gateway. How Users Access the Library Today
Digitizing rare or out-of-print books that might otherwise be lost. The Current Status of gen.lib.rus.ec
Genlibrusec
Despite legal setbacks, the Libgen community maintains a decentralized network of "mirrors" and proxies. Users typically find current access points through community-driven platforms like the r/libgen subreddit or dedicated uptime monitors. Current active mirrors often include: libgen.is libgen.st libgen.li Alternatives to Libgen
Accessing research that was otherwise locked behind expensive institutional subscriptions. genlibrusec
Genlibrusec was the primary URL for , a massive digital database of scientific papers, academic textbooks, and general-interest fiction. The domain extension .rus.ec reflected the site's early operational roots in Russia and Ecuador. For years, it served as the go-to portal for: Despite legal setbacks, the Libgen community maintains a
On , a U.S. judge ordered the operators of Libgen to pay $30 million in damages to publishers, leading to the seizure of several key domains, including the "library.lol" gateway. How Users Access the Library Today Genlibrusec was the primary URL for , a
Digitizing rare or out-of-print books that might otherwise be lost. The Current Status of gen.lib.rus.ec
OpenFOAM Funding 2025 - Please take 1 minute to read
Supporting organisations currently provide €250k for maintenance of OpenFOAM, i.e. of the order of 0.1% of the revenue of big commercial CFD. This current total is inadequate. Funding needs to rise to €500k this year, and continue to rise similarly over the next 3-4 years. Organisations with commercial dependence on OpenFOAM should contribute to the cost of sustaining it.
The OpenFOAM Foundation provides Maintenance Plans for organisations to support sustainability. There are three levels of Plan: Platinum (€ 100k per year); Gold (€ 25k); and, Silver (€ 5k). The funding supports a full-time team of core developers with combined skills in software design, programming, numerics, science and engineering, at CFD Direct (including OpenFOAM’s creator, Henry Weller).