Z-Library (Z-Lib) is an online shadow library that provides free access to books, academic papers, and other written content, often bypassing traditional copyright restrictions. The platform operates through a mix of centralized infrastructure and distributed mirrors, allowing users to search, download, and contribute content. It functions as a user-driven access platform rather than a traditional publisher, with accounts enabling features like download tracking, preferences, and contribution activity.
Researchers at Cybernews discovered an exposed database belonging to Z-lib, a malicious clone of the shadow library Z-Library, in late June 2024. The data sat on a misconfigured web server with directory listings enabled, allowing direct download of a recent database backup. The exposure included roughly 9.7 million unique user records.\n\nThe data covered usernames, email addresses, country codes, Bitcoin and Monero wallet addresses, purchase records, and bcrypt password hashes. Z-lib was not the original Z-Library service. It was a phishing operation set up shortly after the seizure of Z-Library domains in November 2022, designed to harvest credentials and payments from people searching for the original site. Researchers also confirmed that registered users had been targeted with spam containing malicious links.\n\nThe breach carries unusual downstream risk. The combination of email and crypto wallet addresses can deanonymize transactions and link them to specific individuals, exposing users to phishing, blackmail, or wallet-targeted theft. In jurisdictions where access to pirated material is itself enforced, the data could also support legal action against users. Anyone who registered on a Z-Library-style site since late 2022 should treat associated credentials and crypto wallets as compromised, rotate passwords, and move funds from any wallet linked to the account.
ObscureIQ assessment: Exposure enables account takeover, phishing, and profiling based on reading interests. Platform association may also create legal or reputational concerns depending on jurisdiction and usage.
Direct institutional impact on Z-lib is hard to measure because the operators were running an illegitimate impersonation site rather than a normal business. The exposure ended Z-lib as an ongoing operation. The data leak also provided law enforcement and rights holders with detailed records of users, payments, and cryptocurrency activity, which can support investigations into both the operators and individual users in jurisdictions where pirated-content access is prosecutable. There is no public record of formal regulatory action against the Z-lib operators, who remain unidentified.
Z-lib was a malicious phishing clone that operated primarily at z-lib.is, set up to impersonate the well-known Z-Library shadow library service. The site presented itself as a continuation of Z-Library after the original platform's domains were seized by U.S. law enforcement in November 2022, and it ranked highly in search engines for Z-Library-related queries. Visitors believed they were accessing the genuine ebook and academic-paper repository. In reality, the site collected credentials, payment details, and cryptocurrency wallet information, and it reportedly sent registered users malicious links via email.
Shadow-library communities collect user accounts, emails, reading activity, download history, and community participation tied to free content access and distribution.
The Z-lib clone is now defunct. The exposure of its user database in mid-2024 effectively burned the operation, since both copyright holders and law enforcement now have visibility into a large portion of its user base, and the data has circulated on breach-tracking services. The original Z-Library service it impersonated remains active, operating through alternative domains and Tor despite ongoing domain seizures and legal action. Other phishing clones of Z-Library continue to surface, exploiting the same confusion among users seeking free access to academic and pirated content.
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Attribution and method are based on available breach intelligence. Reported attack vector: Misconfiguration.
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Researchers at Cybernews discovered an exposed database belonging to Z-lib, a malicious clone of the shadow library Z-Library, in late June 2024. The data sat on a misconfigured web server with directory listings enabled, allowing direct download of a recent database backup. The exposure included…
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