Vol. 2May 2026

Comparison · 2026-04-23 · Reading time ~ 8 min

Pagera vs existing public e-libraries: a reader's-eye view

National libraries, city public libraries, and commercial subscription e-libraries all look like 'reading digital books' — but access, language, and licence are completely different. Here's where Pagera fits.

Pagera Editorial

"Reading digital books" covers national libraries (Korea's NLK, US Library of Congress), city public libraries with e-book lending, commercial subscription services (Kyobo SAM, Ridibooks Select), and Pagera. From the outside they look similar. From the inside they assume entirely different things about the book and the reader.

The four models, side by side

Dimension National library (NLK etc.) City public library e-books Commercial subscription Pagera
Access Registration, often on-site terminals Local library membership + loan quota Monthly fee, ID verification Free, even without an account
Catalogue size Millions (inc. academic, periodicals) Thousands–tens of thousands Tens of thousands under licence 24,446 public-domain titles + AI translations
Languages Local + some originals Local language Local + some English 6 (Korean, English, Japanese, Chinese, Spanish, Vietnamese)
Translations Scanned existing print translations Existing print translations Existing print translations AI + 98-point review, displayed bilingual with source
Licence Complex (per-title copyright) Lending model with DRM / expiry Rent-while-subscribing Public domain + CC0 translations, permanent
Hold queues Yes Yes for popular titles No (subscribed) No concurrency limit
Cost Free (taxes) Free (city budget) ~USD 7-10/month Free (ads)

The biggest real difference: ownership

Public library e-book systems and subscription services lend books that belong to someone else. That's why loan caps, holds, DRM, and "subscription ended? lose access" exist. National libraries mostly digitise copyrighted materials too, so most viewing is conditional.

Pagera works on a different footing. Every Pagera title is out of copyright — public domain. No one owns it; nobody is "lending" it. No holds, no expiry, no subscription lock-in. AI translations are released under CC0.

What each model is best at

National libraries

Research, scholarly archives, old periodicals and newspapers. Unmatched for historical and academic material. Weaker as a reader's app for world classics.

City public library e-books

The simplest legal way to read recent commercial releases — accepting loan caps. Very little overlap with Pagera.

Commercial subscription

Strong on new releases and bestsellers, optimised for dedicated reading devices. Pagera doesn't carry new releases; we're strictly public domain.

Pagera

Fastest path for reading world classics in your native language. If no translation exists yet, request it and it enters a public queue. Paragraph-aligned bilingual mode is a feature other services rarely offer.

How readers mix these

  • "I want today's new release" → public library e-books or subscription
  • "I want a 100-year-old classic in Korean" → Pagera
  • "I want to study English alongside the original" → Pagera bilingual mode
  • "I need a scanned 1930s magazine" → national library digital archive
  • "No Korean translation exists yet" → request on Pagera, wait for queue

Pagera in one sentence

Pagera isn't a replacement for e-libraries. It covers the specific intersection of world classics × multilingual translation × public domain that the others don't. That's why it can coexist with every service above — it fills a gap rather than taking a slice.

Further reading

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