Page:Hachette Book Group v. Internet Archive (2023).pdf/7

 to hold or read print books, and patrons who want brief or spontaneous access to books and for whom it would not be worth a trip to a brick-and-mortar library. Def.'s 56.1 ¶¶ 55–56.

Under IA's implementation of CDL, two factors determine the number of digital copies of a book that can be borrowed at any time from IA's Website. ¶ 50. First, IA makes available one digital copy for each non-circulating print book it keeps in storage. ¶ 51. Second, IA partners with libraries to "contribute" the number of their print copies of the book toward the number of lendable copies on IA's Website. ¶ 52. Even if a partner library has multiple copies of a book, IA counts only one additional copy per library. For example, if IA owns one non-circulating print copy of Laura Ingalls Wilder's (1932), and three partner libraries each contribute a copy of the book, IA would lend its digital copy of  to up to four patrons at a time. ¶ 53.