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RapidShare: Traffic and Piracy Dipped After New Business Model Kicked In

Under continued pressure to take additional anti-piracy measures, file-hosting site RapidShare introduced a new business strategy last year. The model restricted the ability of all users to engage in third party public distribution, the most popular way of sharing copyrighted material. As a result the company experienced a significant drop in traffic and, according to a spokesman, a significant drop in copyright infringement too.

As one of the planet’s largest file-hosters RapidShare is continually under the watchful eye of the world’s entertainment companies.

After years of lower-level complaints, during 2010 there was a significant development. In a response to a request from the Office of the US Trade Representative, the RIAA submitted their list of foreign “notorious markets” and among the usual torrent site suspects were surprise entrants RapidShare.

In the year that followed RapidShare worked hard to combat the allegation that they were some kind of rogue site. The company selected a twin approach – to change the negative perception of the company and show that the file-hoster really cares about copyright protection. The strategy paid off.

“The fact that we were not included in the 2011 list is a result of these educational efforts,” RapidShare attorney Daniel Raimer told TorrentFreak.

But RapidShare weren’t finished. Last year in the wake of the Megaupload raids the company reduced the speeds available to users of their free service after admitting that lots of pirates had jumped on board since the Mega shutdown.

Then in April 2012 RapidShare published a pretty tough and controversial anti-piracy manifesto for fellow file-hosting sites to follow. But still the industry response to RapidShare’s overtures was an underwhelming ‘must do better’.

“RapidShare allows unlimited distribution of copyrighted files among millions of anonymous strangers without taking adequate steps to prevent this illegal activity,” an RIAA spokesman declared.

But by November 2012 even that complaint had been addressed. In a surprise announcement RapidShare declared that it would place strict limits on the amount of outbound public traffic its users can generate. Free users were limited to just 1 gigabyte per day while paid users had a cap of 30 gigabytes during the same period, stopping the unlimited distribution of files amongst “anonymous strangers” overnight.

Now, just a few weeks on from the big decision, we thought it might be interesting to take a look at any effects it may have had.

Embedded below are Alexa stats for RapidShare. Note the large increase in traffic corresponding with the influx of users following the shutdown of Megaupload in January 2012. Note the steady decrease in traffic as the bandwidth throttling measures of RapidShare took their toll. Then notice what happened at the end of November as RapidShare eliminated large-scale third-party sharing.

RSTraffic

TorrentFreak asked RapidShare how the company feels about its latest business decision, the results, and how these affects its long-term strategy.

“It is in the nature of things that a traffic limit leads to a reduction of traffic. We can also confirm a reduction of copyright infringements since we launched the new business model,” the company told us.

“Therefore the development is indeed very beneficial for RapidShare and is proof that we have chosen the right approach. For 2013, we’ll further concentrate on product innovations and are looking forward to announcing RapidDrive for Mac OS X soon which will make our cloud storage service even more attractive.”

Presumably another huge plus is that due to RapidShare’s efforts it is unlikely that the company will find itself on a future USTR list or share the kind of fate that ended Megaupload. It could even conceivably become the target of gentle praise from the likes of the RIAA who have rarely had a good word for the site.

The flipside in the short-term is that RapidShare could lose a bit more traffic, at least until it manages it balance the loss of traditional file-sharing traffic with its new image as an antipiracy-motivated Dropbox-style cloud-hosting business.

In the meantime the RIAA and friends have a new anti-piracy bogeyman. That site is called Rapidgator and in stark contrast to the new RapidShare model its slogan is “Share files with your friends. No limits. Easy as ever.”

Rather than type a thousand words, let’s take a look at one last image to show that site’s incredible leap in popularity in just 12 months.

gatortraff

Whichever way you look at it, traffic-wise that’s an incredible performance – any minute now the site will be bigger than RapidShare. Hosted in Russia, Rapidgator will be keen to avoid the attention of authorities, particularly considering the recent anti-piracy crackdown announcement.

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  • RG THAT

    And Rapidgator’s boss is either in bed with some sort of corrupt politicians in their homecountry or he’s going to feel the long meatpole from the MAFIAA group and their bought powers up his anus. Couldn’t be said simpler.

    That being said, even though Rapidgator’s system was pretty crap to start with it is the best one out there that doesn’t give you too much headache when grabbing a file.

    • RG THAT

      Forgot to say…RS is a bunch of pushovers. After so many years of fighting these nutjobs, they roll over? Perhaps the company made enough money and is now ready to move on to other things.

    • Guest321

      I don’t think this article is about the gator.

      • Guest321

        Oops sorry, it does talk about the gator but I’m not sure if it has any relation to RS.

        • Go On… I’m listening

          @shams shams …………. “Tania”

          Elaborate please.

        • Frankia098

          @Go On… I’m listening

          Tania=Anon in transvestite mode.

      • Brian Steel

        Rapidshare isn’t even worth discussing anymore. We all know the moment you realize a person is linking only to Rapidshare, it’s time to move on. Look for greener pastures.

    • Poole Gene

      Rapidgator has links to the govt.. they are making a fortune now and some govt officials are very happy.

      They will pretend to care about the MPAA whining and eventually it will be shut down….

      …and replaced with an all new hoster, run by the same people.

      Rinse, repeat.

      FUCK THE RIAA
      FUCK THE MPAA
      FUCK BIDEN AND OBAMAO
      FUCK THE USA

      • OneEyedWillie

        I agree with your first two fucks but for the last two?

        YOU CAN GO FUCK YOURSELF ASSHOLE!

        • Christopher Kidwell

          Poole Gene, do you really think that it would be any better with Romney in office?

          NO, IT WOULD BE FUCKING 100 TIMES WORSE! Not just on ‘copyright infringement’ but on numerous other, hellishly more important subjects.

          If Romney the Devil Supreme was in office, we would be marching towards our next 3 wars: Pakistan, Iran, Syria.

        • Masau Fuku

          @Christopher – Actually, in regards only to how much they suck up to the MPAA, Romney probably would have been better. He and Ryan aren’t very close friends with a Chris Dodd, unlike Biden.

          But in pretty much every other respect, Romney would have been just as bad or worse. Which is sad considering how much Obama/Biden suck.

        • Anyone

          Oh I’m sure once the “campaign contributions” came in he would have been best buds with Chris Dodd as well

        • RG THAT

          The campaign contribution was given by some of the biggest corporates companies in the US and the MPAA would have been the bottomfeeders, hence, their agenda would be last on a priority list…First one would have been Wynn Casino guy’s priorities, i.e. something to do with gambling laws.

          Romney would have been better in regards to internet privacy and freedom. For the 3 wars to start, I wouldn’t give a sh!t…That would mean no agenda for Internet would ever be top prioritised if Romney started kicking off wars with Middle Eastern countries.

        • ndmushroom

          @Christopher:
          Hard to say (mind you, I’m only talking about copyright/filesharing, not about the economy, international affairs, education, social issues etc. It’s not at all hard to say in those cases).
          On one hand, you’ve got Joe Biden (a whole chapter by himself) and the Democrats-Hollywood traditionally amicable relations. On the other hand, you’ve got Fox news and “corporations are people, but people aren’t corporations”. I don’t know who’d be better.

      • Andyman

        Meh I agree with the top three. Owebama fucking sux

        • Lifetime

          You will agree with the whole list, just give it time.

        • Andyman

          Limetime, just because the US has fucked up laws with regard to copyright doesn’t mean it isn’t the best place on the planet to live. Don’t be a hater just because you’re a foreigner.

        • michael

          ‘best place on the planet to live.’
          maybe yes…maybe no

          ‘Don’t be a hater just because you’re a foreigner.’
          maybe you’re the foreigner

        • Andyman

          Maybe you’re an idiot.

        • Lifetime

          “Andyboy” you had not the decency to correctly write my nickname
          and now you’re insulting to michael?

          Best place to live? Hard to say, but if you’re not part of the group,
          it might hardly be a paradise. All of those who migrated
          can tell you more about it.

          So? You’re one of those who raise a flag every morning?
          USA is great, no matter what, there’s no need to repeat it,
          you know the whole world knows that, the problem is:
          Some people around the globe do not agree and have valid reasons,
          you want to receive some love, but with that attitude you just failed
          and made the situation worst. Good job.
          We should be neighbors, that’ll be the best ‘hood to live on the planet.

        • Andyman

          Well I certainly didn’t mean to make the situation “worst.”. Thanks for weighting in just the same. Lol

        • Jimmy671

          ”Maybe you’re an idiot.”

          OR,maybe you’re a Hillbilly,without enough to brain cells to scratch your arse.

        • Andyman

          Well you’re ugly and your mother dresses you funny. So nanny nanny boo boo stick your head in do do

  • Anyone

    good bye and good riddance, rapidshare

    looks like shooting yourself in the foot wasn’t a good idea, huh?

    • Guest

      RapidShare: “Things are looking great!”
      Internet: “..Why?”
      RapidShare: “Traffic reduced greatly!”
      Internet: “…”

    • Frankie098

      @Andyman

      How childish!

  • Rekrul

    RAPIDSHARE: Share files easily!

    MAFIAA: You need to do more to prevent copyright infringement!

    RAPIDSHARE: We’ll take down any infringing files that are reported to us.

    MAFIAA: You need to do more to prevent copyright infringement!

    RAPIDSHARE: We’ll scan external web sites for links to our service.

    MAFIAA: You need to do more to prevent copyright infringement!

    RAPIDSHARE: We’ll limit the speeds for free users.

    MAFIAA: You need to do more to prevent copyright infringement!

    RAPIDSHARE: We’ll put daily download limits on files.

    MAFIAA: You need to do more to prevent copyright infringement!

    RAPIDSHARE: Due to a sharp drop in usage, we can no longer afford to run our company. Rapidshare will be closing down.

    MAFIAA: We approve!

    • thedude321

      Ultra Like. This is exactly how its going to turn out, or they are going to get taken over by dropbox.

      • Daniel

        eww… dropbox?

    • Who

      I stopped using rapid share after I heard about the throttling. and yes I was uploading there so called pirated works. but never really noted the speed throttling. but who cares any way there NOT the only cyber locker.

      “MAFIAA” just think what they will do or say when they go out of business.

    • OneEyedWillie

      That is always their agenda. Don’t ever forget it.

    • ColinCarr

      RAPIDSHARE: Due to a sharp drop in usage, we can no longer afford to run our company. Rapidshare will be closing down.

      MAFIAA: You need to do more to prevent copyright infringement! Now you aren’t busy running a filthy pirate site, you have more time to spend what’s left of your money fighting other filthy pirates for us!

    • Scary_Devil_Monastery

      True enough.

      Because the real threat is the cyberlocker itself, as an alternative for legal artists to market themselves.

      Not piracy.

  • Anonymous

    it’s obvious there is going to be a drop in traffic if a service is restricted. it’s also obvious that Rapidshare is going to say there has been a reduction in the sharing of copyrighted files. if they didn’t say that, the entertainment industries etc would be jumping all over them to do something else to reduce ‘infringement’. the scary thing as well is, how does Rapidshare know what files are infringing and what ones are not? i assume they are doing exactly what the industries tell them so i wonder what collateral damage is being done? i dont for one minute that all files they remove are infringing any more than all those they dont are not infringing. however, we have had loads of reports of things being removed when they shouldn’t be. i must admit as well, i am curious as to what Rapidshare is going to be demanded to do next. they dont seem to get it that the more they do, the more they are expected to do, how it’s their business being affected, not the industries and the day the service closes is the only day the industries are actually working towards!

  • Dongs

    Because rapidshare sucks and will always suck as of 3 years ago anyway :c

  • X1q5

    “Therefore the development is indeed very beneficial for RapidShare and is proof that we have chosen the right approach.”

    Please, everyone, don’t panic. The Titanic is not sinking.

    • 7th_Guest

      “Furthermore on that last point, icy cold water has been known to have beneficial qualities to the skin and overall body health, so I really don’t know what all this panicking is about.”

  • John Space

    RapidGator’s captchas are deliciously surreal; one day I found one that showed the Oracle logo and asked me to describe that brand with one word!

    • xpmule

      ya some are funny

  • Byte Master

    I think RapidShare will become a small niche player soon enough. Within a couple of weeks we can welcome Mega.co.nz to the market, and as the article indicates, there are many others. They won’t be fully outside of the reach of the MAFIAA, since they control who MasterCard/Visa/AMEX/PayPal are allowed to provide services to.

  • Midas

    ‘Educational Efforts’

  • http://gear-mentation.myopenid.com/ Gear Mentation

    ROTFL. What more can you say? Looking forward to the graph of Mega. What we need most is a free monetary system. We have that in bitcoins, but those are extremely hard to use due to the trouble translating them back and forth with normal currency. We need something better there.

    • Guest

      Why not just go back to the old system and use cheques or money orders?

      • http://gear-mentation.myopenid.com/ Gear Mentation

        Hum, yeah… haven’t used those for a whils (: But that still depends on the corporate banks which the MAFIAA can pressure.

  • Olaola

    xD they can die already ! and good decision licking mafia ass rapid ! xD

  • got runs ?

    Can’t wait for MEGA on the 19th.

  • Andrew me

    Why have none of them just implemented what mega is doing surely it is not that hard, well i suppose it is if he is the only one doing it.

    I am also wondering when the new systems are going to start rolling out where torrenting will be 100% anonymous, it must be close to completion now, i wonder if they are just waiting for the IDJUTS in the media industry to take one good swipe at torrenting, maybe taking down 20-30 of the biggest sites overnight. If they released a totally anonymous system the next day i think a lot of businesses never mind pirates would be very happy with them.

  • http://twitter.com/GatitoMimosin GatitoMimosin

    POBRE RAPIDSHARE….

    • GOSTO

      GOSTO

  • chris_p_bacon(R.O.L.L)

    i am still amazed how a film can get into my laptop from mcdonalds, through the air, from across the road. i mean, i can then put it on a disc and go in and play it to all the employees, i mean, that’s truly amazing, you should see their faces when i tell them this, i should post it on you tube.

  • Sinese

    Get fart rapidshare!

  • cogg

    rapidgator’s popularity amongst file sharers, even before seeing the stat, grew significantly in the past few months.
    is the cause rapidshare’s reduction in users’ abilities to share ? quite likely.
    rapidshare’s main downside will reflect when users decide they’ve had enough of a once very good filehost and not renew their accounts.
    which is what i’ll be doing.
    hit them in their corporate pocketbook and i predict yet another change in rapidshare – a swift decision to once again change download limits.
    which will be too late.

  • Anyone

    you even have a download limit when you pay for it?
    that business model will work…

  • frozar

    Glad I am not an investor in RS. Nothing like putting your money in something and the company releases a statement seeming quite pleased to only have 1/3rd of its previous market share.

    I don’t place much faith in their project in development. The trick to winning that segment of the market is being first on these scene. They’re a day late and a dollar short. Hundreds of small and driven startups out there who are determined to strike gold in the mobile market.

  • TheOiulkj

    Of course there was a reduction in copyright infringement, there was a reduction in traffic period.

    • Andrew Lee

      Yeah that’s what I was thinking as well.. All that’s happened is traffic is being directed elsewhere and it’s business as usual. Globally it is most likely piracy has not slowed down one bit.

      I mean look at the volume of new sites popping up and they’re all automated requiring almost zero upkeep. Then you have to look at how the files are being uploaded. Mirror services are nice you upload your shit once and they upload it to a handful of other host all in one shot.
      It’s extremely cheap and very effective when it comes to getting the job done fast as possible.

      We all hear the same shit day after day “we’re loosing money don’t let our record breaking profits fool you.” I know some of them are most likely uploading the files themselves just for the fact that extortion pays extremely well.
      Why take $10, $20, or $30 for a DVD when you can take a few grand by just sending out a fucking letter?

      No actual proof just a IP that could have been used by you, a friend, a kid, someone jacking into your wifi, and too many others to list.

      I makes me wonder when the Prince of Nigeria is going to start doing just that. There are still a shitload of people dumb enough to fall for that scam so I’m guessing someone will being using it to their advantage sooner or later.

      Most of the cases never even go to court and plenty of the people paying up are innocent but it’s cheaper to pay them off than to be dealing with a costly court battle. Especially if it’s a porn company because it’s going to be embarrassing whether you’re guilty or not.
      I could see that being used to the max for a scam. (I call it a scam because they’re not the copyright holders. If they were I would be calling it extortion again lol.)

      Oh well either way I can see shit getting out of hand to the max before 2013 is up. Luckily a lot of people are starting to wake the fuck up. This war is not over by a long shot but I have faith the majority will win.

      • Anon

        “I have faith the majority will win.”

        No question. The torrent news just this past week indicates about a quarter billion “sharers” in three billion online. Less than 10%. That’s consistent with other metrics and even the Pirate Party memberships.

        You are correct Andrew Lee. The majority, in fact, will win. “Law and order” has a funny way of coming out on top. Why?
        Because the vast majority of civilized people want it.

        • Anyone

          so the majority of people want all privacy and due process abolished?
          interesting

        • Anon

          @ Anyone

          “so the majority of people want all privacy and due process abolished?”

          No. That’s not what I said at all. In fact, it is axiomatic that the vast majority of 90% don’t pirate at all and would appreciate it if you would knock it the fuck off so we can retain some privacy and due process.

        • Anyone

          copyright can’t be enforced with privacy and due process still intact
          one of the two has to go, and since copyright serves no purpose anymore it will go

          hopefully sooner rather than later

        • Anon

          @ Anyone
          “copyright can’t be enforced with privacy and due process still intact”

          This is a blatant falsehood. The fact is that the percentage of internet users worldwide who pirate has fallen steadily since 2006, and is now under 10% and still falling. Part of that is the proliferation of easier legal services. But a big part of it is surveillance, domain shutdown, isp cooperation, conviction and punishment, especially for site admins. Can you point to a conviction so far that has not stood review or appeal because it violated privacy or due process rights?

          No. I didn’t think you could.

        • Who

          “The majority, in fact, will win. “Law and order” has a funny way of coming out on top. Why?
          Because the vast majority of civilized people want it”

          when the law makers themselves break the law and are NOT held accountable for it, show me were the people want this? as this is what Law and order stands for to day.

          http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gu5JdmsLWVk&list=FLZehVWSPOf0z-_wN9Wzr-IQ&index=3

        • Anyone

          “But a big part of it is surveillance”

          as I said, no privacy anymore

        • Guest

          “The fact is that the percentage of internet users worldwide who pirate has fallen steadily since 2006″

          So has piracy increased or decreased? Are pirates breaking more or less law? Has this happened over the last five or ten years? Do we need more or less licensing of VPNs?

          Make up your mind, Anon! I know you’re brain-damaged, but hey – you’re typing here, aren’t you?

        • xpmule

          Anon

          enough with the lies and propaganda..

          you say..

          “The fact is that the percentage of internet users worldwide who pirate has fallen steadily since 2006″

          How in gods name can you or anyone else know this ?
          Public Torrents sites, Private Torrent sutes and all other P2P networks such as ed2k etc and File Locker services and the spread of user to user drive sharing in peoples homes or class rooms..

          YOU KNOW NOTHING and your moronic “”facts”" are pure ignorance !

          Stop drinking the purple koolaid son ;)

        • icec0ld

          @Anon
          “This is a blatant falsehood. The fact is that the percentage of internet users worldwide who pirate has fallen steadily since 2006, and is now under 10% and still falling.”

          Care actually quote your source of these figures?

        • AnonCrusher

          A supposedly drop in p2p users doesn’t mean a decrease in piracy. Users have moved to cyberlockers, VPN and usenet. Making meaningful statistics on the subject nearly impossible. But judging by the proliferation of cyberlockers and the huge increase of DMCA take-down requests, I hardly think piracy is on the way out.

        • Scary_Devil_Monastery

          You must be polling a very private brotherhood. Or asking some very strange answers.

          Last time I checked, some 50% of the polled population could care less, the rest was overwhelmingly for noncommercial filesharing, with one very small minority extremely vocally against.

          Here’s a hint, Anon. Try not to quote the poll where people had to answer whether they were for or against the free dissemination of bootlegging, counterfeit medicine and copyright infringement.

          Two out of those three are almost impossible to answer “yes” to.

          Of course, that was what sunk ACTA as well. No one would buy the view that IP belonged under the category of “health hazard”.

        • michael

          Hello Mister Troll

  • icec0ld

    RapidShare: Holy dick Christ! Being anti consumer is pissing off the people who pay for our services!

    This shouldn’t be a surprise. Rapidshare is a waste of time these days even for none sharers.

  • Whatever

    “reduced the speeds”

    As if that were ever a problem.

    Just let it run and do something else. Even the waiting time can be spend in other browser tabs like TF.

    BTW: The little traffic they still have is probably misdirected people trying to download something that isn’t there anymore. So it will drop even further when the links disappear.

  • Guest

    “Our business was dying”, said a RapidShare spokesman, “but the closure of MegaUpload revitalized it with an influx of new users. Luckily, however, we were able to alienate those new users – and then some! – by implementing restrictions that made our service awful. Now we’re back on track to die. This is very beneficial for us and proof that we chose the right approach by cooperating with the RIAA!”

  • Hdhsh

    Bye bye RAPIDSHIT, 8 days for….MEGA!!!

  • Tiredofthisshit

    I wonder when will someome show to the governments of all nations that hollywood is dead while sillicon valley is very much alive, how long, how long???

    • Anon

      What does the continued technical innovation in Silicon Valley have to do with unlawful, infringing uses of that tech? Innovation is not consistent with illegality and piracy is not some new “innovation.”

      It’s not the tech’s fault same as it is not RapidShares fault anymore. Lawful companies that distance themselves from facilitating and this condoning online illegality will thrive. Like Paypal. Sites that are based in lawlessness will inevitably fail. The fault is in the piracy. That fault is being addressed.

      • Anyone

        the MAFIAA is trying to destroy every new tech

        luckily they have failed in the past, and will do so again, but it is still annoying

        • Anon

          Such rubbish. lol There are over 500 different legal ways to procure/consume/possess digital entertainment files according to the ECONOMIST, and every single one utilizes the internet and digital tech.

          You sir, are a moron.

        • Anyone

          the ones I tried have “not available in your region”

          also, how big is the delay window?
          can I netflix a tv episode minutes after it aired? or do I have to wait weeks or even months?

          and just look what the MAFIAA is doing to google, neutering the search results with DMCA requests, if that is not killing tech I don’t know what else they could do

        • icec0ld

          @Anon

          Link me 10.

          I’ll see which of these are available for purchase in my region.

        • boilingh0t

          “Link me 10.

          I’ll see which of these are available for purchase in my region.”

          I’ll second that, icec0ld! All the brick and mortar rental stores have shut down in my city. The theater has become way too expensive, plus there are a ton of other reasons why I can’t or won’t go there anymore, including (but not limited to) major health concerns.

          The only option left would be to buy the bluray of every single movie I want to see. That is like buying a car without taking it for a test drive first! Not even the staunchest copyright supporter would do that.

          Like most downloaders, I have no trouble with paying so long as the price is reasonable and justified. I’ve looked at the paid internet solutions like Netflix, but they are complete and utter junk in my country (a first world one at that). There is just no excuse for much of the crap the industry pulls and until they smarten up, my only choice will remain unauthorized downloading.

          Naturally they’ll say I just want it all for free, but if that were true I wouldn’t be donating my hard earned money to the sites I use. I also pay a pretty penny for my cable service every month, which includes music and movie channels (theatrical releases hit these within three months usually).

          So it’s not like Hollywood isn’t seeing any money from me, something that is definitely subject to change depending on their actions. If I didn’t like to channel surf from time to time, I’d probably get rid of it to be honest. Even as a bundle that includes internet and telephones service, it is still pretty expensive. And to top it off? I’m unemployed. Yet somehow I’m perpetually portrayed as an evil villain by the industry and used as an excuse to pass harsher, ever more restrictive laws

          If the industry wants everyone to pay, they need to first accept the fact that downloaders and customers are one and the same, then they need to accept the very simple fact that free market capitalism has, and always will, revolve around supply and demand. Most important of all, they need to stop treating us as if we’re criminals and start treating us with respect. It’s really very simple, treat people how you wish to be treated.

          If you don’t give people what they’re asking for, why the hell do you expect them to pay? Would you pay for a car wash if all they did was dump dirt on your car? Stop being such greedy, evil pricks and give the masses what they want! Don’t expect money to just fall into your lap. Earn it! Or keep passing laws everyone will ignore and wasting time playing whack-a-mole. Your choice. Just don’t come crying when your industry fails, which I guarantee will some day if you refuse to change your ways.

      • Who

        IF you are a US resident….honestly I don’t think that you have ever read the DMCA at all as it does mention things about tech devices and guidelines.

        witch BTW ARE required to be followed BY the tech industry’s AND the entertainment industries. currently both the RIAA and MPAA are NOT fallowing them. there more interested in what the law can do for them instead of fallowing it.

        • michael

          HE is just a troll,not a US resident,maybe a Swede,not sure.

      • Who

        “Such rubbish. lol There are over 500 different legal ways to procure/consume/possess digital entertainment files according to the ECONOMIST, and every single one utilizes the internet and digital tech.”

        hmmm 500? I never read any ware, were it said that.

        lets see there are CD’s witch are music albums, dvd’s, bluray, video games.
        that’s one.

        digital media….for audio….currently the ONLY formats sold are mp3, aac, flac, wma. that’s 4 so that would make the total 5.

        digital video media…..mp4, m4v, mkv, avi, m2ts, ts, real video, flv.
        that’s 8. now we are @ 13.

        game downloads. not really sure what format steam games are in but as far as I know it just one format for ALL game downloads.

        so that brings us to 14 ways…..so I fail to see how this comes even close to 500 even IF you split all the kinds of media up is STILL would not come close to 500.

        so yes sir “You sir, are a moron”

        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gu5JdmsLWVk&list=FLZehVWSPOf0z-_wN9Wzr-IQ&index=3

      • xpmule

        Maybe the dying business model has something to do with their lost revenue ?
        Blockbuster closes and that is who’s fault ?

        get a clue..

      • AnonCrusher

        Let’s assume that The Economist is a valid source of information (and not a corporate whore), would you care to link to the article so we can all read it and not have to take your word for it. Because so far you haven’t been exactly a model of intellectual honesty to say the least…

      • michael

        ‘You sir, are a moron.’

        Temper Tantrum,Poor Boy,Calm Down.

  • Anon

    “Hosted in Russia, Rapidgator will be keen to avoid the attention of authorities”

    “Run and hide.”

    Now THERE’s a business model for success.

    • Anyone

      it’s Russia
      as long as they keep away from politics they will be fine

      • Anon

        Right.
        An unlawful business sneaking as long as it can behind politics is a great business model. Nothing new to see here.

        • Anyone

          it is lawful
          offering cloud storage is not illegal in any country that I know of

        • Scary_Devil_Monastery

          Unlawful by no court in existence, you mean?

          Or is it, as usual, an “unlawful service” because you personally happen to think so?

          I suspect the latter.

        • michael

          ‘An unlawful business sneaking as long as it can behind politics is a great business model.’

          Sounds like you are talking about the MAFIAA

    • xpmule

      Learn how to make money and quit crying to me about made up phantom lost revenue when stats show file sharers make the industry money.. no need to extort it from us when we’re already giving it to you..

      greedy much ?

      stop trying to make excuses dishonest and foolish behaviour.

      You think you can stop me ? Go for it lol
      You think you can get money out of my pocket ? I’d love to see you try ;)
      You think you can trick me whith your propaganda ? your high..
      You think ? ..barely :)

    • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

      The real business model for success is, “Change Copyright Law.”

      • Anon

        I’ve been telling pirates to get off their cheap torrenting asses and get that into gear for a decade. Thanks for agreeing.

        • Scary_Devil_Monastery

          You mean the way we’ve been storming Germany laterly, and got the third largest political block in the EU parliament to accept and adopt the pirate platform entirely?

          Yes, for once we do agree, dear Baghdad Bob.

  • foff

    Rapidshare has to be fucking stupid. Who is there target customer? They are no good storage if I have a download limit. Besides with overhead how the hell can they offer cheap storage? They can’t you need premium accounts that do not use storage. These changes are exactly why cloud storage is bullshit. Does anyone remember streamload. I had over a terabyte of stuff there when the most popular affordable disk was 50gigs or may be 100. But I could never download much as it was far too expensive since they charge by the mb for downloads. Then they went belly up so it did not matter.

    What company can offer everybody who signs up 30 terabytes of storage indefinitely for $12 a month? The answer is none and if you trust any you will eventually lose all or most of your data. Most of us are not not professional travelers and only need massive storage at home and can buy a 3 tb external drive for $150 or less whenever we need more and will be there until the drive dies. Thus only a small minority need cloud storage.

    • Vivajones

      My employer used Rapidshare on the company website, but no one has the time to monitor the download usage 7 days a week, so we’re with Sendspace now, even giving them free advertising on the site.

      How long before those Einsteins at Rapidshare come up with yet another new scheme?

  • Shogunreaper

    so why the hell did rapidgator’s trafic go up when rapidshare implemented the new limits?

    Rapidgator also has that shitty 15GB limit.

    • RG THAT

      Wrong. Rapidgator has 15GB limit download a day per user, but for uploaders they have unlimited.

      Rapidshare has limit for ONE file to have 30GB limit on it. That means a 1GB file uploaded by the uploader will only be able to be downloaded 30 times…Where as 500 rapidgator users can download the file 1x each and still have remaining 14 GB left. Get it?

      • Shogunreaper

        Rapidgator still has a 15GB download limit and its still terrible.

        Can’t even download a full blu-ray rip.

        • foff

          Which is why this news is somewhat outdated. Most sites I visit rapidgator links have started to disappear. The good thing is that most stuff is now mirrored on several sites so if one is not good there are options.

          Anyone serious about downloading with filelockers needs premium accounts. An occasional file via free account is fine but without premium accounts I would give up and get everything with torrents.

  • PelouzeTF

    “Whichever way you look at it, traffic-wise that’s an incredible performance”

    A site that enables users to earn money by uploading whatever they want and at the same time, allows surfers to download copy-written media without paying, substantially increases its traffic…., no way, say it aint so.

    A gigantic queues would also form if burglars stood on street corners selling the contents of the places they robbed at 0.0000001 cents on the dollar too.

    I tried to look at it “whichever way” but I guess i’m just not that easy to impress Enig.

    • Anyone

      nothing is stolen

    • Shogunreaper

      Except that me giving away 1 movie 1 million times doesn’t mean they lost the equivalent of 1 million sales.

      • PelouzeTF

        Where did i say it did ?

        • Shogunreaper

          before you edited it.

        • PelouzeTF

          nice try simpleton – nothing was edited regarding what you saidd. Try reading the post next time instead of making things up.

        • Shogunreaper

          (Edited by author 21 hours ago)

          I know what i read, maybe you should think before you post.

        • PelouzeTF

          I know I didnt say anything about 1 download = 1 lost sale, because I dont believe it does, never have.

          we both know you typed an off the cuff response, not even understanding what I wrote and then back-pedaled with some weak excuse after I pointed it out.

        • Shogunreaper

          You compared it to theft, which means you think a download equals them losing money.

        • PelouzeTF

          A percent of downloads IS going result in the copyright holder losing money. But not 1 for 1.

          I’m guessing you haven’t earned your income online from creative media over the last decade to see the effects of cyberlockers…..so how would you even have the foggiest idea as to their real impact ?

        • Shogunreaper

          Of course you have some proof of copyright holders losing money from downloads right?

    • Guest

      Have you tried selling anything at 0.0000001 cents? Damn, and I thought only the crowd under your special desk suffered from brain damage. Guess the industry white chocolate doesn’t fall far from the industry cocksuckers.

      • PelouzeTF

        Selling at a fraction of whole dollars is very simple. I wonder if you can work out how, its really not difficult. Go on, stretch that lump in your head a bit, you’ll get the answer.

        • Guest

          If it’s simple enough for you then good for you. It’s not my business to figure it out.

          Selling things at 0.0000001 cents was never the problem for the common filesharer because no money changes hands between uploader and downloader.

          Try again.

        • PelouzeTF

          Money does change hands between the locker and both downloader and uploader. On certain locker plans, in the fractions of cent per download for both uploader and downloader.

          Therefore, my comparison example is correct.

    • Scary_Devil_Monastery

      And what does your straw man above compare to?

      Burglary?

      That one’s new. Copying an mp3 file is now according to PelouzeTF the same as breaking, entering, and making off with money and goods.

      Are you really dense enough to bring up the old “filesharing is theft” rant again?

      • PelouzeTF

        I’m not bringing up any “rant”, that particular topic is a separate issue.

        You however are clearly so dense that you cant deduce that the point is how a site could increase its traffic substantially in a short period of time.

    • michael

      Are you related to Anon,bobmail,wall-mart,sure sounds like you are.

      • Jimmy671

        Could be a long lost Bro,who knows for sure.

  • Big5auce

    Rapidshare can only monitor and collect data analytics for it’s site and the traffic it used to carry, by saying there was a significant drop in Piracy would be foolish to say the least.

    If you look at the numbers, the days and months following the megaupload raid till the present time, the only thing that’s gone increased vastly is more Piracy if that’s what you can even call it… the number of people on P2P has shot through the roof, not including the many new other file sharing lockers that file sharer’s are using.

    The one true fact is that Rapidshare forgot it was providing a valuable service and instead caved in out of fear of being targeting just like megaupload was even though the reason’s were two completely different things.

    Megaupload screwed its customer’s over, myself included. They twice restricted access to my premium paid memberships which I ended up paying for something that I couldn’t use. with no customer services or people within the company to call and resolve my issues with, I realized then MEGAUPLOAD was heading for it’s own doom by pulling the crap they didi.

    Rapidshare on the other hand was a valid, physical business, with customer services centers and support, they helped you resolve your issues as i spoke with them physically over the phone when i had password problems unlike megaupload which just kicked me out of my paid membership.

    The bottom line is that Rapidshare just bankrupted itself and has only mitigated Piracy by giving other companies to pick up and do what it was doing before all this happened.

  • Guest

    RapidShit

  • xpmule

    They lost their relevance long ago..

  • Vivajones

    All those “I Hate Rapidshare” Facebook pages dead from a lack of interest….

  • David

    Oh common, the only reason Rapidshare is still alive is because of people uploading copyrighted material. If they upload important files (non-copyrighted) then they would have just used Dropbox/Google Drive/Skydrive. Good luck Rapidshare!

  • Rusty Shackleford

    FileServe, FileSonic, FileJungle, Wupload, UploadStation, and few others have done similar things. Look what happened to them.

    After what Rapidshare has done, it will be hard to see them go away.

    • Christopher Kidwell

      One has gone under and I think that FileServe and FileJungle are on their way to going under, since no one would enroll at a service where they could not even share their own files by giving someone a link to it.

  • Thom

    The RIAA rarely has anything good to say about any body. Fuck those ass holes and may their (and their family) burn in hell.

  • Sababa

    Well, what this title is missing is that it’s also a drop in cybercrime. At the end of the day, piracy is crime. It’s theft.

    • Anyone

      it’s neither a crime nor theft

      try again

    • Jimmy671

      It’s infringement,not theft,do your homework.

  • Cindywilliams25

    this is not enforced; twice this week I downloaded 1.5 GB with excellent speed, and no limits.

  • bobmail

    The funny part is essentially as soon as they made it harder to use their service for piracy, people left. It clearly tells you what people where using the service for.

    Stories like this make it harder and harder to deny the realities of file lockers and “backup” sites that allow unlimited access to everyone.

    • Frankie098

      Hi bob,stop by for a bit of Trolling,carry on.

  • wosnjdsdsd
  • ddddrelease

    http://www.addddrelease.com/

    new site for your tv shows music games njoy it

  • hemroid

    I don’t know why people think that RapidGator is great. It is slow for me and I have a real nice connection. Files continually start off ultra fast and then slow down to next to nothing.

  • Aj47951

    Thanks man.

  • ScrewEwe2

    Gracias.

  • BTGuard - BitTorrent Anonymously

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