Megaupload taken down by FBI. (1 Viewer)

flammablepiss

Facebook User
Dark times for the internet. It seems the U.S. had to flex a bit of power after yesterdays blackout campaigns. In response Anonymous have successfully attacked RIAA, Hadopi.fr justice.gov, whitehouse.gov, fbi.gov, copyright.gov, Motion Pictures and Universal websites.
Quite fascinating to see all this pan out.
 

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Otis

Well-Known Member
I have used Pirate Bay.


When they come knocking on my door though I am going to tell them I was looking to buy a parrot.
 

Marty

Well-Known Member
SOPA, in it's current format will never be passed through, I can understand parts of it and see how companies need to protected against film piracy for example, but this law is just completely wrong. If I posted on here and asked how to fix the brakes on my bike and someone replied to it with a step by step process, that would be classed as piracy which for me is just completely wrong. Money talks unfortunately.
 

flammablepiss

Facebook User
Yeah it was one of the biggest file sharing sites online (Like rapidshare basically). I used to use it loads before torrents were popular. SOPA will be passed in some form it just depends how much of the bill they change to become more reasonable.
 

AngryAnt

Well-Known Member
SOPA won't pass, not after yesterday and all the backers doing a U-Turn. The best one was the guy who actually wrote SOPA will actually be breaking it himself as he used at least one picture without crediting the artist.

Megaupload is the biggest filesharing website around (4% of the internet traffic they claim). Its the US flexing their muscles as they managed to arrest the owners of the site in New Zealand and the actual site is registered in Hong Kong.
Its interesting to see the first shells being lobbed but theres a way to go yet with Anon. & the US Gov. I'm glad someone is sticking up for the people though (SOPA/PIPA is NOT about piracy, its about control and politics).
 

dutchman

Well-Known Member
It's a ruse by Universal to stop people from downloading "The Thing". Universal has made false allegations against MegaUpload before. I think they've also uploaded some corrupted versions of the movie to stop people from playing it back.
 

WillieStanley

New Member
This is why they targeted Megaupload specifically

Last Thursday the US Justice Department came down hard on Megaupload and its mega founder, Kim Dotcom. In the days since, there has been a shake-up of sorts in the digital storage realm. Several smaller sites have drastically changed their business models. Others, like MediaFire, reached out to me after I published this post attempting to distance themselves from Megaupload.
However, yesterday, a new theory surfaced that indicates Megaupload’s demise had less to do with piracy than previously thought. This theory stems from a 2011 article detailing Megaupload’s upcoming Megabox music store and DIY artist distribution service that would have completely disrupted the music industry.
TorrentFreak first reported about the service in early December 2011. Megabox was just in beta at that time with listed partners of 7digital, Gracenote, Rovi, and Amazon. Megaupload was in a heated marketing battle with the RIAA and MPAA who featured Kim Dotcom in an anti-piracy movie (5:10 mark). The site had just sued Universal Music Group for wrongly blocking Megaupload’s recent star-studded YouTube campaign. Things were getting vicious in December but the quiet launch of Megabox might have been the straw that broke the millionaire’s back.
Dotcom described Megabox as Megaupload’s iTunes competitor, which would even eventually offer free premium movies via Megamovie, a site set to launch in 2012. This service would take Megaupload from being just a digital locker site to a full-fledged player in the digital content game.
The kicker was Megabox would cater to unsigned artists and allow anyone to sell their creations while allowing the artist to retain 90% of the earnings. Or, artists could even giveaway their songs and would be paid through a service called Megakey. “Yes that’s right, we will pay artists even for free downloads. The Megakey business model has been tested with over a million users and it works,” Kim Dotcom told TorrentFreak in December. Megabox was planning on bypassing the labels, RIAA, and the entire music establishment.
Megaupload was likely large enough to actually find success. Other services have tried what Megabox was set to do, but Megaupload was massive. Prior to its closure last week, the site was estimated to be the 13th most visited site on the Internet, accounting for 4% of all worldwide Internet traffic. It boasted 180 million registered users with over 50 million visiting the site daily. Megaupload was already a seemingly trusted service for artists to distribute their work. Megabox would have a monetized that popularity by passing on the bulk of the earnings back to the artists.
“You can expect several Megabox announcements next year including exclusive deals with artists who are eager to depart from outdated business models,” said Dotcom late last year. But that’s probably not going to happen. Kim Dotcom and several other Megaupload executives are now awaiting trial on various charges including racketeering, money laundering, and various counts of piracy. It seems they flew too close to the sun. High on success and a half a world away in New Zealand and Hong Kong, they attempted to take on the music industry head-on. Now they’re in jail.

http://techcrunch.com/2012/01/24/wa...its-upcoming-megabox-digital-jukebox-service/
 

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