NyxCharon
Active Member
I don't want to see what happens if they try.
Everybody will move to torrents, just sending more traffic to the Bay and not fixing much.
and well this has already happened. bay traffic is up %15 from normal atm.
I don't want to see what happens if they try.
Everybody will move to torrents, just sending more traffic to the Bay and not fixing much.
and well this has already happened. bay traffic is up %15 from normal atm.
The government(s) seized Kim Dotcom's assets, including servers and his major partners.Yeah I heard that too.
And apparently what the feds did was just remove the nameservers from the MegaUpload domain - you can still get to it via the IP address, or so I heard.
The government(s) seized Kim Dotcom's assets, including servers and his major partners.
He was hosting the content in several countries, without servers in the U.S. the speeds here would have been horrible.I doubt they'll get anywhere with this. He'll just name all the internet service providers as co-defendents, since they contributed by storing the material on their servers before reaching the endpoint. And probably name youtube also. They'll be so full of paperwork they'll drop the suit. Then, if he's smart, he'll host the site in another country.
He had all the data stored on his servers, most of which was illegal - so yes, it's still his fault.This intervention is pure BS, I mean the website wasn't illegal, it was SOME of the content stored by users. As long as he didn't store any illegal files, he should be fine. He even had the "report abuse" button. If he gets proven guilty because of the website, then you can arrest all the ISPs who provides internet access to pirates...