Rapidshare To Be Forced to Shut Down Following Court Defeat?
Written by enigmax on January 29, 2008The music industry in Germany has secured a legal victory over the hugely popular file-hosting service, Rapidshare. According to the rights holders, Rapidshare is going to have to stop its users from downloading infringing music tracks from its servers, or face the prospect of being shut down.
Last week we reported on rumors that Rapidshare had, or was about to be, shut down, rumors that now look likely to resurface. The company, one of the world’s largest ‘one-click’ file hosting services, has lost a copyright infringement case against German performing rights outfit, GEMA. Representing a claimed 60,000 members and more than 1 million rights owners worldwide, GEMA has taken an aggressive stance in pursuing legal action against Rapidshare, trying to force it to be accountable for the infringing actions of its users.
For its part, Rapidshare has always insisted that it cannot be held responsible for these actions, such as when users upload copyright works (in this case, music) to their servers for subsequent downloading by others.
On 23 January 2008, the district court in Düsseldorf (Landgericht) disagreed with this assertion after GEMA succeeded in convincing the court that Rapidshare should take responsibility for infringements carried out within its service.
GEMA are trying to imply that as a result of the decision, Rapidshare will be forced to take preventative action to stop GEMA works from even getting onto their servers, rather than a DMCA-style after-the-fact removal. GEMA says that if Rapidshare are forced to filter they will likely end up with a service that’s not worth operating, so they may decide to shut it down completely.
The GEMA press release has been published before the complete court decision, so it should be digested with at least a degree of scepticism, considering the huge amounts of spin employed by anti-piracy agencies and the music industries alike.
In a statement, Dr. Harald Heker, Chairman of the board at GEMA said: “This decision is a milestone in the fight against the illegal use of our repertoire”, which was almost a carbon-copy of a statement he made about the decision from a previous court case against Rapidshare. He went on to explain that measures have to be put in place for the protection of rights holders and claiming that file-hosts are not responsible for what their users do, is no longer an option. “With this decision of general principle,” he said, “the course of future action against comparable services has been smoothed.”
In their press release, GEMA speaks about the decision of the District Court of Düsseldorf but also mentions a decision from the District Court of Cologne.
TorrentFreak spoke to Christian Solmecke a lawyer at the Cologne Chambers of Lawyers Wilde & Beuger, to see what is likely to have happened in these cases.
He told us: “The normal way is as follows: GEMA files a lawsuit against Rapidshare because of alleged copyright infringement on three or four songs. If GEMA wins, Rapidshare is then obliged not to host these particular songs.”
Lots of anti-piracy and industry bodies state that it’s possible for file-hosting services and even ISPs to monitor, police and filter copyright works from their servers and networks. This case is no different, except this time it’s the court that has demanded this type of action.
Christian explains: “From a legal point of view, it is interesting that the District Court of Düsseldorf decided that Rapidshare has to carry out a lot of preventive actions (if the GEMA press release is correct on this point, of course). This could mean that Rapidshare has to check all of its hosted material for copyright infringements - which is nearly impossible.”
The instruction for Rapidshare to take preventative action is new, and despite another similar court case reaching a different decision. Christian explains: “Only 30 kilometers away from Düsseldorf, we’ve already had a similar law suit in Cologne. In that case the Oberlandesgericht (Higher Regional Court and Court of Appeal) decided that Rapidshare is only obliged to delete specific songs stated by GEMA. They were not obliged to take preventative action.”
“The future will tell us which interpretation of the law is correct.” Christian told us. “Perhaps in one or two years we will get a decision on this question from the Federal Court of Justice.”
As the world struggles to update its laws to cope with the digital revolution, the courts - and lawyers - are being kept very busy indeed. So back to the original question: Is Rapidshare going to be closed down - or be left with no alternative but to shut itself down?
Well - maybe……maybe not.
Christian finishes up: “I believe that Rapidshare will appeal against the decision of the Landgericht (District Court) of Düsseldorf. If they do so, we will have to wait and see what the Oberlandesgericht (Higher District Court) of Düsseldorf (as the Court of Appeal) says.”
In the meantime, while the legal wheels turn and turn, Rapidshare.com and Rapidshare.de continue to operate as usual.
Previously: How to Convert Millions of BitTorrent Users to Qtrax
Next: European Court Decides FileSharers Should Stay Anonymous


98 Responses (Add yours or TrackBack)
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I dont like rs..
Let
Them give me a free premium acc and i will support them..lol…
And what is rapidshare supposed to do with the password protected files?
Use this site instead of going for premium account..
http://hack5.blogspot.com
Who’s next ? Google ?
That sucks.
People could just put passwords on the file and on the rar then change the name to something like “holiday 07″ and then batch file into a HD wallpaper and if rs sees where are all the “clicks” are coming from you can just use lix or summat…
Who Needs Real Women Anyway when you have Rapidshare ;-)
lawyers_need_to_have_their_cocks_chopped_off
I use rapidshare to distribute my own music legally and for free. GEMA are fucking with me.
Suuuuure you do.
how about moving the servers to another country.. german copyright laws are rather draconian.. among all other issues they have with censorship etc.. it’s great that they have to shut down the entire site just because a few files are infringing.. it’s a wonder how they could stay in that fucked up country that long..
That’s pretty fu&#ed up.
I wonder how these GEMA dickheads think the internet should be used?
Maybe they want people just to leave and not log onto the internet?
Another problem we all face is Judges.
They’re all so damn old they probably still think in 1950’s mode.
Is RS in Germany? I thought they had moved to Switzerland when they changed from .de to .com??
any info?
Why does Rapidshare be shut down by (excuse me french) a crappy country like Germ?
Because RS is run by Germans, still has a office in Germany and does business there.
They need to move completely to Switzlerland to be safe from the german GEMA.
good ridance…i hate RS…
rapidshare sucks, let’em shut it down so morons stop using this piece of shit and start using better, freer file hosts with no ads
Lets compromise:
1.) Rapidshare hands the monitoring work to GEMA
2.) GEMA can propose to nuke any file that looks like it could contain the newest justin timberlake album.
3.) Rapidshare confirms that the file is what it says it is and deletes it
-1.) People start uploading password-protected .rar files
huh that SUCKS!!!
we are the future and GEMA neanderthal AGEthis is the same problem in FRance we come back in the past thx for radiohead charging their new album
well said PTM thats a solution ill ditto and yes am a fan of rs been so for almost a year and i dont think there is anything available compared in quality of services
Good idea. A .ws-page that links to the files on Rapidshare and says the password. That way they cant monitor it.
Genius. Really.
Quote Rapidshare.com:
“With 210 Gigabit/s of Internet connectivity and 4.5 Petabytes of storage, RapidShare is one of the biggest and fastest web hosters world wide.”
Good luck shifting all of that lot to another country without interrupting the customers service, and without damaging the treasury of RS.com forever…
Personally, i love RS.com, its a fantastic resource. And recent legal action against it is unjust.
Urgh @ lawyers.
x
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