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RapidShare Wants A Crackdown on Linking Sites

File-hosting service RapidShare admits that the file-hosting business has its challenges, but says that linking sites are the real problem. The company advised the U.S. Government last week that law enforcement should crack down on these websites, instead of writing new legislation that may stifle innovation. To address these piracy concerns, RapidShare’s Chief Legal Officer Daniel Raimer is meeting with technology leaders and law enforcement at the Technology Policy Institute forum in Aspen today.

rapidshareIn common with every file-sharing service, RapidShare is used by some of its members to host infringing material.

While RapidShare itself has no search engine, there are many third-party websites that facilitate piracy by linking to copyrighted works stored on file-hosting sites. These websites are the real problem, RapidShare believes.

This is one of the messages that RapidShare’s Chief Legal Officer Daniel Raimer is presenting at the Technology Policy Institute forum in Aspen today. Raimer joins a panel on Copyright and Piracy and informs TorrentFreak that he plans to counter the image that file-hosting sites are a problem.

Raimer believes it’s important to stress that “legitimate” file-hosting services are merely offering a technology, and are not the ones facilitating piracy.

This is also the point the company made in its advice to the U.S. Government earlier last week. Responding to a public consultation on the future of U.S. IP enforcement, the company emphasized that linking sites are the real problem.

“Rather than enacting legislation that could stifle innovation in the cloud, the U.S. government should crack down on this critical part of the online piracy network,” the company wrote.

“These very sophisticated websites, often featuring advertising, facilitate the mass indiscriminate distribution of copyrighted content on the Internet and should be the focus of US intellectual property enforcement efforts.”

In addition to a crackdown on linking sites, RapidShare also believes that the U.S. Government should continue to push for voluntary industry agreements to counter piracy, instead of writing more legislation.

These agreements have already been reached in the advertising business and among payment providers, and file-hosting services should not be overlooked RapidShare notes.

“[The U.S. should] continue its work to secure voluntary industry agreements to address repeated online piracy and counterfeiting and include cloud storage and file hosting companies in these efforts,” they wrote.

Earlier this year RapidShare published a “responsible practices” document for the file-hosting business, which they believe could be a basis for an industry agreement. While the major music labels said at the time that RapidShare’s suggestions didn’t go far enough, Raimer told TorrentFreak they are the absolute limit for the file-hoster.

Raimer is convinced that when file-hosting companies take their responsibilities seriously, and when law enforcement goes after linking sites, copyright holders should have little left to complain about.

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  • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

    Linking is not a crime. Well the public now knows stay away from Rapidshare(rapidfail) and let them go bankrupt like the riaa.

    • Anonymous

      Whether or not something is a crime no longer matters. The police don’t need a warrant to arrest you, or a trial to imprison you, so why should they care about the specifics of the law?

      • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

        I guarantee you if some cop steps in my home without a warrant or proof shit will hit the fan. The talking down to people doesn’t apply to me. I could careless. As long as I have my amendment rights and don’t speak without a lawyer present they won’t hear a word from me.

        Secondly you can’t falsely arrest or accuse someone of a crime if there isn’t a crime to charge someone with in the first place. That being said any company/government entity wishing to make false claims will be sued to high heaven. Guaranteed!!

        Seriously though if you’re that stupid to get caught publicly committing a crime,regardless of whatever crime you committed then you deserve to be arrested.

        I live in heavily populated area. Lots of WI-FI connections cross all over the place. I feel sorry though for those that live in small communities.

        But back to linking the government tried making laws to make linking illegal the EFF, DemandProgess, ACLU, several others, aswell as the hundreds if not thousands or even millions of TorrentFreak supporters fought to stop these useless laws from even being created.

        We can’t stop fighting til these greedy bastards get the point. Like I’ve read not to long ago on techdirt and was clearly stated,
        “If The Government Needs To Step In To Help Your Business Model, You Shouldn’t Be In Business.”

        • thedude321

          You really are an idealist. People are being extradited, and their businesses are being killed within seconds. Trust me, the constitution will not help you, when you are the and they are the boot.

          Laws need to be changed dramatically. Right now too…

        • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

          Call me what you like but in the wild you have to fight for your rights to be free. Do you want a socialist internet or do you want a free internet created for the people by the people.

          I prefer a free internet the one where i can share my ideas enjoy my freedom online and not be told how i should spend my time on there.

          The industry just doesn’t seem to want to adopt then, we have to create a whole new net and business model that the so called creative industries can try and dictate on. At the same time protect the rights of the artist who created it. All I’m really saying is FIGHT FOR YOUR RIGHTS!! DON’T STAND DOWN NOR GIVE WEAKNESS.

          I appreciate your opinion though thanks.

        • Danny

          The saying is ‘I couldn’t care less’.
          Unless you meant to say that you cared.

        • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

          Thanks for the correction. I care enough to know that if i’m being wrongfully accused of something and a group of goons came to my house. I’m not running i will deal with it like a man but not be talked down to.

        • meowmix

          i know how to make file sharing virtualy impossible, ban all hyper links. shite, you should go to jail for linking to a page on the same web page. its the thin end of the wedge to full blown piracy.

        • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

          So how much do paid trolls like you make from the riaa/mpaa? not much i bet.

        • Mastermikeywwt

          I gather you haven’t heard of Kim Dotcom. Dudes a millionaire with loads of lawyers and look where that’s got him.

        • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

          I gather you’re new and haven’t read my comments in the past.I’m fully aware of kimdotcom and personally the us government can’t come up with a better group of word then “he’s a criminal.” Don’t get me started on Chris Dodd and the millions if not billions he’s taken in bribes etc. Or Rupert Murdoch or Sumner Redstone I could go on and on about criminals.

        • Guest

           Unless, instead of bothering to arrest you, or have a trial, they shoot you and say you pulled a gun on them.

        • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

          Then the internet would react and say it was a set up.

        • juchmis

          >Do you want a socialist internet or do you want a free internet created for the people by the people.

          That would be a socialist internet. The issues we’re having now were created by freedoms given to corporations, which they exploited to make enough money to bribe officials to create laws favorable to them. In the end it doesn’t matter what asinine sociopolitical theory word you use to describe a system, because the root cause of all these sorts of problems will always be unbridled capitalism in a virtualized democracy.

          “For the people, by the people” would fit best with a libertarian-socialist system, or at least a democracy where campaign finance isn’t bum****ing backwards.

      • zkank

        When it comes to offenses regarding computers police certainly DO need a warrant to arrest you!

        (Unless you’re currently living in a commie country…and then it really sucks to be you.)

        • Bob Carolgees

          No, the police don’t need a warrant for anything any more. All they need to do is cite ‘anti-terror’ laws and they can arrest you ‘on suspicion’ for pretty much any spurious reason then just make it up as they go along. It’s not about getting convictions in these cases, it’s about destroying businesses. Once they’ve ruined your business they let you go and say ‘we’ve decided not to press any charges, sorry for the inconvenience’. The laws allow them to hold you indefinitely like this and never actually charge you with anything. Because you’ve been ‘legally’ arrested you can’t sue and because you weren’t charged with anything the judicial system can’t be sued for a miscarriage of justice. Do pay attention! ;)

          Oh, this has nothing to do with communism (which the internet in its pure form absolutely is – a huge commune where everyone shares the ‘wealth’), this is life in both the US and UK since the false-flags that were September 11th and July 7th. Anyone who agreed to having their freedoms removed to make them ‘safe’ brought this situation upon us. The intent of government was clear and ‘mission creep’ was always an inevitability when those statutes were enacted.

        • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

          Bob, they extremely rarely do that except in actual terror cases because they know that if they abuse that power, they will have it taken away.

          As paranoid as I am sometimes, I have yet to see them use the terror laws except in cases where someone is actually suspected of being a terrorist. Of course, sometimes the authorities are wrong but those people are quickly released in that case now that Obama is in office.

          The only exceptions to that are the people who are in Gitmo from the time of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars start. Most of them ARE terrorists by the evidence who have not been tried yet. That last thing, the lack of a trial, I have a severe problem with but….. let’s get real: with the majority opinion of society today being that ‘the terrorists don’t deserve a trial!’ I’m surprised they were not summarily executed.

    • TixatiUser

      When they get their way linking will be a crime. It shouldn’t of course. Everything they don’t like will be a crime.

      • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

        You say “when they get their way” Sopa didn’t get to far or Pipa or Coica or Acta was gagged and kicked to the curb. So i’m thinking maybe we should like and let them right? *Cough* I don’t think so the fight is on.

    • Banana

       They want a Google crackdown so? The biggest linking site.

      • http://www.twitter.com/echoman74 echoman

        I won’t speak for google but i think at any given time if they felt the need to change their mind they will. Secondly google isn’t the only search engine. I’m just shocked how many people today one after the others show how they fear the government. Or simply trolling ;P

    • http://otester.myopenid.com/ PiRat

      Rapidfail seems to miss the point, this is about stopping anonymous distribution, not copyright.

    • Obvious

      Owning a gun isn’t a crime. Using it to kill someone is.

      Linking isn’t a crime. Using it to commit infringement is.

  • anonymous chicken

    So…..why is anyone using Rapidshit again?

    • Guest321

      Because the other hosts are even shittier for both free and premium users alike. Atleast with Rapidshit you get what you pay for with premium subscription. The other hosts are just here to take your money and rip you off.

      • Mak

         Mediafire, Putlocker, Zippyshare and others offer free simultaneous high speed downloads.

        • nothingfound

           I think RapidGator is good as well!

        • Heisenberg7

          4Shared.

        • Glib

          So does bittorrent, which is typically faster, unlimited, and sourced by people who just want to share for free (actually, often are PAYING to share with you via seedbox).

        • Guest321

          Yeah sure Rapidgator is good. Oh wait good for what again? Ah yes its good for waiting all day to download a couple of 200mb files.

          And Mediafire would of been good if it weren’t for their 3 strike policy causing all uploaders to abandon them.

    • Bobb

      Why use RS?  No wait between downloads and no lame assed daily restrictions like VapidGator.

      Its not that hard to figure out.

      • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

        Unfortunately, true. If Rapidgator would get rid of that stupid “X downloads per day!” I would be more than willing to use them more for my TV show downloading.

  • Guest

    Rapidshare sux.

  • Anyone

    they should take the MAFIAA cock out of their mouth

    if they want to kill their own business, that’s fine, but don’t tell others how to do their business

  • Guest

    Rapidshare wants a crackdown on linking sites (wink wink nudge nudge)

  • <3

    they will get 30€ from me again soon. because a lot of people upload there and compared to rapidgator it’s even cheaper and a lot more stable in points of speed and reliability

    • Ihikjhg

      Why don’t you buy a usenet account for like $11 and enjoy unlimited downloads at full speed with no caps? 

      • Guest

        Rapidshare charges 30 euros for a 150-day premium access. That’s full-speed unlimited downloads as well, not to mention you can upload files without any file-size limitations to your account for storage, later retrieval or sharing.

        • Fulun

          They also log your IP address and payment info and will willingly give them out to law enforcements if needed.

      • John Spartan

        Only pay $5 here, low retention tho. But how often do you dl stuff from more than a year ago, me? hardly ever.

      • meowmix

        giganews premium account has vpn with it.

  • Guest

     Rapidshare isnt great anyways.. the download speed limit is awful.. it sticks at 0kbs for ages.. then get a little speed.. a 10meg file takes hours to download.. I’ve not used rapidshare in years

    • Guest

      then how do you know how their speed are?
      i’ve been paying them for years and i will continue to do so. whereas other hosters are long gone, RS keeps their position. i wont complain at their speed either, i’m always maxing my 20Mbps

      • Glib

        I max my 100Mbps cable connection with generic torrents; my connection is hardly all that impressive too … 20Mbps is double 10baseT, not exactly a paradigm to measure hosting speed from.

        My short stint at an ISP, the fastest server we were able to pull from was Microsoft’s FTP and my Easynews account; both sites were capping my consumer gigabit NIC meaning they had plenty left over … I was downloading movies from torrent at 55MB/s, pretty awesome for free.

  • Nick

    who cares about RS, terrible service

  • anon

    Thanks Rapidshare,
    Thanks for reminding us what the USA is already doin for years, and miserably failed to do.

  • Dsadasads

    Aaaaaaaaand I am never using RapidShare again

  • Anonymous

    considering all the accusations and shit that has been thrown at Rapidshare, it is still operating, basically untouched, the same now as it has been for years. pointing the finger at what others do wont do it any good. in fact i am greatly suspicious that they have done a deal with the Devil here (the entertainment industries) so it is left alone. calling a meeting to bring other sites to the attention of whoever is going to make it very unpopular with other companies and customers alike. they need to be careful. people living in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones. if it is incriminating others to try to protect itself, good luck. the industries are not exactly well known for being honest. once the usefulness has expired, shit will hit them just as much and it will be well deserved.

  • http://twitter.com/Anime4PSP Anime 4 PSP

    lol really, who uses rapidshit anymore anyway?

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  • Gear Mentation

    LOL, wharz ma P2P search engine?

  • Guest

    I see Rapidshare’s point here, which is the same point raised by Megaupload, that they merely provide online file storage services. But then, the only way you can kill linking sites is to implement SOPA/PIPA-style legislation. Of course, we all know what happened to SOPA/PIPA. Rapidshare knows that there is no solution to the piracy problem but it doesn’t want to take the fall for it.

    • Guest

       I believe there point comes down to “Don’t raid me, bro!” and to achieve that, they’ll throw other people under a bus.

    • Banana

       No, they i just pretending they are upset on piracy and throwing the fault at someone else. They love the piracy. Dropbox can live away from it, there is a reson, it is possible!

  • DKBB1974

    Rapidshare is actually right on the money. If linking sites which are often commercially sponsored disappear, there is less incentive to go after the non-commercial smalltime file sharers.  In most countries, there is a minimal threshold for criminal and civil action. If I share my music collection with my ten friends via RS, no one is going to bark.

    • Tim87

      Nah.

      Sharing music with your ten friends is as old as dust. That isn’t what this is about.

      I think there is a real problem with us music sharers burying our head in the sand about what is really going on here. People have shared music forever, but now that a bunch of business-types decided to exploit that for financial gain, on their cyberlocker/BT/link sites, we are getting fucked. Seriously fucked.
      Nobody gave a damn about people sharing music with each other before these sites came along looking to profit from it.

      The internet has ruined real music sharing.

  • ForestSilverwood

    Good luck with trying to actually find all the linking sites. I doubt half of them are listed in Google’s index.

  • Sdasdas

    shitty speeds and now this, have fun losing all your users rs.

  • Sketch

    yup, rapidcrap blows……..

  • Marek Bukovic

     I would change the sentence to:

    In common with every file-sharing service, RapidShare is used by MOST of its members to host infringing material

    • Bob Carolgees

      That’s funny, because most of the links I get sent are for perfectly legal files which my clients have hosted on their business accounts there, because POP/SMTP servers typically don’t like ~500Mb email attachments.

      This is why the term ‘cyberlocker’ is a bad moniker. They’re ‘cloud hosting’ services, just like the ones provided by Apple or Amazon or a myriad others. That those big business names aren’t also branded by the MAFIAA as ‘teh evilz piratz sitez’ says more about this issue than anything.

  • Robert

    Rapidshare was my fav host but now what rapidshare is believing to do is not right.

    Rapidshare you are not only letting others down but your own premium members as well.

    Rapidshare is sucks now.

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  • Kevin Grech

    I am wondering, if piracy is such a big problem, then I assume that a good percentage of the bandwidth used globally is for piracy. If that’s true, it also should be a pusher for higher bandwidth. 
    I mean, come on, who would just open a rapidshare account or any other file-sharing websites just for storage since they’re not a backup service?

  • mc007

    in germany, sharing of links falls  under the freedom of speech.

  • 1hhh1

    Judas!

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  • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

    This sharing shit is so ‘rapidly’ becoming a crock of rip-off shit :(

    The legislation DOES need changed – but not in any of the ways these money-grabbing, rip-off archaic fucktards want it to change.

    What we need in new laws is VERY simple -
    1.  Knowledge is free;
    2., Knowledge will always be made available to whomever on demand requires it;
    3.  Knowledge so demanded will be provided at zero-cost to those who so demand;
    4.  All people MUST share their knowledge AS REQUESTED to the best of their ability and capability quickly and on demand;
    5.  The definition of “knowledge” is anything intangible which can be shared between people.

    Simple!!

    OK, so it may take a little time to adjust to the new ‘culture’ and way of thinking – but that’s how it CAN so easily work in principle and for the benefit of Humanity worldwide.  It’s why I have an internet connection – isn’t it why you have one too ffs?

    • http://www.facebook.com/mylifeismuzik Dynamitri Joachim Nawrot

      I’m all against the four-lettered organisations, but knowledge AIN’T free. didn’t you pay for your high-school/uni coursebooks? take a look at Amazon, some books cost in excess of $100-$200. that’s a sad state of the matters, but it’s reality.

      • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

        Sure, it’s CURRENT reality DJN but what I’m talking about is the furtherance of Humanity where we don’t all get charged or ripped-off simply because we know (or purport to know) facts.

        What I’m talking about is simply a cultural change that ceases to charge people cash for them to know anything – whether that be of so-called value or worth or not.

        See now my friend?

    • DoN0tReply

      The only reason I could come up with why the US (via the MAFIAA) are so desperate to crack down on ‘piracy’ is the effects a free and fettered download extravaganza would have on the economy.
      To elaborate; if everyone downloaded stuff free and clear (without even the tiny possibility of a court appearance) than the people who currently only such media through legal purchases wouldn’t need (although they may still do so if they choose) to spend money on copyrighted media and thus have this ‘extra’ money of which some can instead be used to pay down the mortgage and/or all other debt.

      * apologies if it double posts as net cons is playing up atm *

      • Bob Carolgees

        To be honest, that’s exactly how things are right now. People don’t HAVE to pay for stuff and generally don’t have to fear court appearances, but paid-for services still exist and are flourishing. Thus proving that paid-for can and indeed does successfully compete with ‘free’.

        • DoN0tReply

          ‘People don’t HAVE to pay for stuff’

          I was talking in a legal sense (ie those who abide by the law) as opposed to those who practice civil disobedience. The US wants everyone to follow their laws as they benefit from it in both the prolonging of debt (a debtors society makes people more obedient and less likely to revolt) and in sales taxes that come along with the exchange of currency (either directly within the US or indirectly via international import/export trade of non US governments as they use the USD for exchange; given the USD global reserve currency status).

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  • Vincent Giannell

    Someone should sue Rapidshare for this.

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  • Guest

    Pots and Kettles.They are only wanting the MAFFIA to go after someone else instead of going after them.

  • Guest

    When is Rapidshare going to get the Feds storming trooping into the home of its owner and have servers shut down ala Megaupload raid style???

  • http://twitter.com/adblaze Adblaze Marketing

    Snitches get stitches.

    • Bobb

      No such thing as a snitch.  It is the expression of the butt hurt fool who thinks there is some sort of honor among thieves or the selfish thug who relies on intimidation and fear.

      Its absurd how often people even involved in serious crimes (not file sharing) invoke the term as if “snitching” is some how less “right” than what they have done.  (rape, murder, etc.)

      Your silly code is a joke.  Anyone who expects another who isn’t family to watch your back gets what they deserve.

  • Vincent Giannell

     This will never work out for Rapidshare because there will a massive protest against this action.

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  • chronoss chiron

    hahahahahaha and what did i say about these places when all you idiots , yes that’s you all above that use them OR NEED them now….exactly this would happen and anyone that uses or supports them gets all they deserve….damn funny ty TF you made my day again on the ideals of having a brain and NOT using shit morons use.

    • Guest

      joke is on you lol

  • antiriaa

    Rapidshare has thrown RS linksites under the bus many times before — like suing all link sites with the name “rapid’ in the site name.

  • Fulun

    Start by taking down Google, they’re by far the biggest website linking to copyrighted material…

    • Bobb

      Yup, Google usually works better than dedicated search sites for files uploaded to file lockers and it doesn’t take a lot of know how.

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  • Jimbo

    so does Rapidshare think that if it can do a deal with the entertainment industries by stitching up ‘linking’ sites’ it is going to be dropped off their radar? i bet it wont be long, even if a deal is done, before they are persecuted just as much as any other site. bloody good job too! the emphasis today is on faster and faster broadband. if people cant download large files from wherever, there is no need for that fast connection. the UK reckons it will have the fastest broadband in Europe by 2015 (they seem to think that anything of 2mps or over is super fast!). what will be the point of that, even if it becomes true, if no one can use it? it will be restricted by ISPs (throttled, not because it needs to be but because it can be), restricted by governments as to what sites can be visited and further restricted as to what you can do when on those sites to protect an industry that makes a fortune every year, whilst insisting it is failing. the only way it is failing is that it wont join everyone else in the digital age, wont give customers what they ask for and keeps lying to governments to have more restrictive laws introduced. it deserves to fail and quickly!

    • Guest

      Sooner or later when there are no more linking sites to go after then the MAFFIA will go after Rapidshare to satisfy there hunger lol

  • LOLLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL

    LOL – I can see it…
    Real Criminal:”What are you in here for” 
    You: I “linked” to a movie
    Real Criminal: “Wow you rebel!”
    You: I got a 250,000 fine and 5 years in prison!

  • GUEST

    Rapidshare is the only service left that is professional and has a team of people working on maintaining its high quality standards.

    Rapidgator? wtf.

    • Guest

       What about Hotfile and Mediafire?! What not professional about them?

  • Guest

    A crackdown on linking sites? Damn, better crack down on every site that has a link just to be sure…

    • Guest

      Been following the news lately?  That’s exactly what they are trying to do.  Just ask Anton Vickerman or Richard O’Dwyer.

  • Vincent Giannell

    I’m sure the other file-sharing sites would rather fight this act than get cracked down.

  • Jdt123

    so let me see if i understand this clown………… he’s happy to host copyrighted content etc but does not want others to advertise the fact,,, what an ass !!

    • DKBB1974

      No, not at all. Rapidshare is not acting inconsistently by hosting user generated content while advocating a crackdown on linking sites. Rapidshare’s legal impunity is predicated on not having specific knowledge, so less public exposure of what users do with the service is logically consistent with Rapidshare’s mission.

    • Bob Carolgees

      It’s not their responsibility (and nor should it be) to check whether an uploader has the right to upload a file. It may be perfectly legal for that user to upload it. I could write a text file and call it ‘Avatar Full Movie BluRay RIP 3D HiDef’ and it doesn’t mean the contents have anything to do with any copyrighted content other than my own. I wouldn’t expect RS to start examining the contents of my files – I’d be rather pissed off if they did to be honest. By not providing a search engine for their site RS can’t be accused of facilitating widespread distribution of uploaded content either and since there’s no way of them to stop linking sites from offering that as a service, mainly because that’s how a free and open internet functions, those links aren’t their responsibility to police either.

      • http://gene-poole.tumblr.com Gene Poole

         so they pass the DMCA, they include safe harbor provisions, and then they ignore the safe harbor provisions because they’re inconvenient.

        God I love america.

        …Did I say love? because I meant loathe.

  • http://twitter.com/meekcritic Meek Critic

    They’ve been going after linking Websites for a long time now.  Eventually, people will have to start putting these sites on TOR.

    • Beara

      sites like TPB have been attacked for a while now. How do you put sites on TOR? I thought the way TOR worked was that it blurred the trail between you and  the given webpage you are going to. I didn’t think TOR hosted webpages. Does it?

      When they eventually get sites like TPB, kat, torrentz.eu, and all linking sites off the web, because that is the ultimate goal, where will magnet links be found? A place that is overlooked as a refuge for magnet links and torrents is Tixati and the decentralized channels. magnet links shared in a channel can only be lost if the channel no longer exists. And a channel can only be stopped by the maker. Even if tixati itself stops development, the channels would continue to exist. The potential with the channels is something I think most people overlook. Imagine if every magnet link on TPB was put into a channel or two, TPB could go down but the magnet links would continue to be available and updated. See the potential?

      • Bob Carolgees

        People will probably just start using blog sites and fake social media accounts to post magnet links. All they need to do is post the hash as a text comment and leave instructions as to how to utilise that in a torrent client which supports the functionality. It’s not hard to do. Isn’t the hydra a wonderful beast? :)

        • Paul

          If you think blog sites and social media accounts wont be controlled you’re crazy. Most already are. I like the idea of a decentralized place that can’t be taken down like tixat’s channels.

        • Bob Carolgees

          @0d1952bd15cd6b2a24f656178e392901:disqus  You think that Facebook is really so stringently ‘controlled’? Facebook themselves admit that 8 or 9 percent of user accounts are fake. There’s absolutely no barrier to setting up a fake Facebook account then using it exclusively to post status updates which are hashtags with comments which are content titles/descriptions. How are Facebook ever going to be able to identify these among the billions of posts on their site every day? They’re pure text, no links at all. All you need is the hash in your torrent client and it acts like a magnet link. These kinds of random sources could pop up anywhere at any time, such is the nature of the hydra.

      • Guest

         This is probably whet he meant by “putting sites on Tor”.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.onion

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  • Giggles

    Of course Rapidshare wants the other sites to fail so it will make money. Less competition. This isn’t about fair or what’s right, it’s about profiting from dying corpses, such as megaupload. To be fair Rapidshare isn’t the first nor won’t be the last nor the only company to do this. But then again, if you’re gonna be a shark, at least be a shark and don’t pretend that you’re a gold fish.

  • free speech

     Nero will
    demonstrate to the people imprisoned in the Matrix that “anything is
    possible.”

    • http://gene-poole.tumblr.com Gene Poole

       isn’t he going to be fiddling while Rome burns?

      Like the faux pas, though. accidental or not.

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  • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

    In the existing P2P environment, Enterprise Survival is a precious priority. 

    The Legacy Monopoly Opposition is doing all it can to Wipe Out any p2p business that can be successfully tagged with its available means.  MegaUploand and Demonoid are only two on a long list; but, of course, and above all, the Copyright Distribution Monopolies want that list to be endless; and, they’ve demonstrated repeatedly that they view the Constitutional Rights of Individual Citizens as mere stumbling blocks to the Annihilation of ALL p2p enterprises threatening their Custody and Control of Intellectual Property in the Western Democracies. 

    I believe that our priority MUST be the Enterprise Survival of emerging p2p Companies: NOT because of the economics, but because of the Politics. 

    Why? 

    Because, although for the existing Copyright Distribution Monopolies the sum total of
    what’s at stake exists in the realm of Profits in Perpetuity associated with continued monopoly previledges under Copyright Law; for the Constitutionally Protected Private Citizens of the American and European Democracies, what’s at stake could never be adequately comprehended in strictly Economic terms, because what they’re risking is the actual continuation of those Constitutional Rights and Democratic Forms of Governance that exist to Protect them against the Arbitrary Powers of ANY and ALL Institutions, Economic OR Political. 

    Would anyone with even a sketchy understanding of what was at stake in PIPA, SOPA, ACTA, CISPA, TPP and Six Strikes, persuade you that I have Overstated these risks?

    In this context, the Enterprise Survival of RapidShare must be as Important to us as that of MegaUpload, The Pirate’s BAY, Demonoid, uTorrent; or, any of the other, perhaps lately lamented, creative p2p business whose operations represent powerful arguments for an Infinitely Distributed and Infinetely Free Internet; and, whose charters speak on behalf of an Infinitely VAST and INFINITELY INCLUSIVE Public Domain. 

    For Democratic Citizens who must live with Judicial Decisions such as Citizens United (which has allowed the torrential flow of Corporate Money into the American Legislature); for Democratic Citizens who are told repeatedly from the Judiciary and The Legislatures, that they have NO rightful expectation of Privacy in Public Spaces, and who are told just as repeatedly from those same Judiciaries and Legislatures that they must learn to live in their Private Spaces with an endless proliferation of “Warrantless” Seizures and “Warrantless” Invasions of Privacy; for those Democratic Citizens who confront what are represented to be the Judicially Unreviewable Impositions agreed between Monopoly ISPs as Imposed TOSs (Six Strikes); for those Democratic Citizens whose Right to Vote is becoming “Qualified” by their ability to apply for and receive “officially acceptable” Identification Documents; for all those Democratic Citizens who might unexpectedly be Arrested without benefit of Warrant in the middle of the night and be cited for Extradition to foreign Jurisdictions to be tried abroad for crimes that are NOT crimes in their home Country; for all those Citizens, perhaps for every one of us, the Institutional Survival of the emerging P2P enterprises on the Modern Internet are a precious Priority……For the time being, for THAT Priority we need ALL the resources we can spare.   
     

      

    • http://gene-poole.tumblr.com Gene Poole

       I think if you want more people to read your posts you need to be less verbose, and use smaller words.

      I agree fully with what you are saying. I see the connections between piracy and occupy, I think there needs to be a serious change the world over, and it goes beyond filesharing to our rights and freedoms.

      but in order for the word to get out, people need to read what you say. and especially in a forum like torrentfreak, the shorter bites you can manage, the more effective you’ll be.

      don’t take this as criticism, so much as a suggestion. you’re free to ignore me if you choose.

      • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

        Thanks for the suggestion…….all my best professors warned me….like you…… against trying to perfect important ideas without economy of expression….my next post will also have something in it about the virtues of humor….

  • Baronluigi

    Another file hosting company acting hypocritically when their maximum incomes come from these kind of websites.

    That is a great reason I think to never pay for a premium account they offer.

  • Dnyt

    So does that mean Rapidshare is legally allow people to share copyrighted works in private?

  • anon

    and when you though rapidshare could not get any worse.  With this new statement  they say to crack down on linking sites they may as well throw names such as facebook and email services as you can share links through social networks and email.

    Last Note. Linking is not a crime.

  • Dog

    Smart business move. Make money from sharing copyrighted material, build a userbase, then do an about face when the shit starts to hit the fan for your business model and wash your hands.

    • Anyone

      like youtube

  • Guest

    RapidShare is dead.

  • Guest

    This kind of jumping on the bandwagon is why I think the movie companies, record companies, etc., etc., will win in the end, and Internet “piracy” will become rare and dangerous. History shows that when a new medium has come along (radio, TV, and now the Internet) the corporations usually end up winning.  After starting out as a open playing field with all kinds of services available, in the end the medium always ends up firmly in the hands of a few big businesses, with a lot of mostly junk available on it, and nothing else.

    Cases in point: broadcast radio and broadcast TV today.

    • http://gene-poole.tumblr.com Gene Poole

        “This kind of jumping on the bandwagon is why I think the movie
      companies, record companies, etc., etc., will win in the end, and
      Internet “piracy” will become rare and dangerous.”

      Not going to happen. Not that I have a crystal ball, but technologically wise, it will never get any harder to copy than it currently is. It just gets easier from this point onwards. It’s a war of attrition on both sides, but the fact is while they can legislate all they want, they’re fighting technology more than people. And that fact makes it a losing battle for the copyright monopolists in the end. It’s just going to be a long time before they give up and accept it.

      Maybe when they run out of money they’ll come to terms. for the RIAA I expect that will happen within the next 10 years if current trends continue.

  • Luke Solis

    you know… RIAA/MPAA wont care. they will still go after file lockers. thats how blind they are.

  • Baba

    I do not like Rapidshare, I think they are a bunch of sellouts only interested in saving themselves but they do have a point in a way. File hosting services are a necessary part of the internet as a way of transfering large files and current efforts to kill these services off in the name of anti piracy are completely foolish.

    The linking sites are indeed the problem, but then again it is also completely unreasonable to say that a link is in any way illegal.

    So that leaves only 1 thing left that can be changed to make it all work togeather and that is copyright law…..

  • meowmix

    @echomanever heard of sarcasm? realy. what kind of simpleton could take that as anything else?

  • Cocksuckers

    Rapidshit sucks anyways

  • http://bestseoblog.net/ Seosoftware

    Raidshare all high and mighty now with their established company but when it first started and they were paying their affiliates they knew exactly what the f was going on… now those days are gone but they pretend like they are better than file hosting sites now days, but rapidshare started just like these sites.

    Besides the fact that I feel like our freedoms on the internet are being limited, we are moving to a police state blah blah, which really sucks. But I know that I for one, will always download their copyright movies and music and enjoy them the same way.

    not going to stop anything

    new laws and legislation that shit is lame but it won’t stop anything.

    • Anon

      “But I know that I for one, will always download their copyright movies and music and enjoy them the same way. not going to stop anything”If any pirate ever feels outraged and wonders where their privacies and rights to that privacy have gone, reread that greedy idiocy above. if it gets any stupider than that, I’d like you to show where stupider lives. he’s trading his rights and freedoms to take illegal copies of entertainment. lol Not exactly brain surgeons. lol At the moment pirates aren’t bringing legal hurt, only the rights holders are. Figure out how to remove the laws or suffer the consequences, as the law intended it. has it ever been different? I didn’t think so. Keep fighting the FREETARD fight, lolol

      • Guest

        Silly, silly, Anon. If you feel the need to put words in people’s mouths you know you don’t have a point worth making, except on toilet paper. But no surprise, there – you sycophants feel a need to insist on claiming that everyone who disagrees with the RIAA is a pirate.

        Did Daddy Pelouzey not placate you with his industry white chocolate? Do you have to sing for your supper, now?

      • Anyone

        he is not trading his rights

        he is simply not supporting the assholes that take away those rights, why do you translate that as “trading his rights”?

        and the political backlash has begun with the Pirate Parties

  • Anon

    This is just silly. Each and every file-host know where MOST of it’s revenue come from: Warez, Music, Porn! So stop with all this bullshit, it’s pathetic Rapidshare!

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  • Fuckrapidshare

    FUCK RAPIDSHARE! Rapidshit=revenge of the germans…

  • An0nYm0u5

    Thats the idea… Remove anyone publicly tracking your site content and making it available for the public that way it will be even harder for government agencies to keep track of what you have on your servers… brilliant.

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  • fangbin818

    tinyurl.com/cyk9xz2

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  • desbest

    This is so transparent.
    Rapidshare is trying to save their own skin by passing the liability to someone else.
    They are so scared after what happened to Megaupload.

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  • Magusat999

    I’m seriously beginning to believe Rapidshare is not the same RS that originated years ago. Remember they were taken down by the Feds years ago,and when you went there all you got was that big Fed symbol? Recall that they were in hot water, shut down and then suddenly came back, strangely different? Call me a conspiracy theorist but I think they are run by some sort of take-down operation.

    That would explain why they never get into trouble even though others all around them are being destroyed. This would be why they co-operate with the MAFIAA and other government entities, and now are acting as if they are the spokesperson for the entire filesharing industry. They have been giving too many passes, and they are much too vocal about their stance against the people who use them and the companies like them to be legit – I really think they are a front.

    A legitamite filesharer would not be taking this stand. They would be fighting to get the government from forcing them to be their unpaid snitches. They would be fighting to stop laws that force them to invade their users privacy (it should be none of their business what people upload, and therefore not be liable for anything the person does). What if I want to upload naked pictures of my wife? The don’t restrict me from doing that – but they don’t explicitly inform me that they will be peering into my files either. I think that sort of thing is an infringement.

    What if I upload artwork that I created? What if the artwork I created was only available to view by admission price – like an exhibit in a gallery. Perhaps an online gallery? Aren’t they infringing on my rights to make a profit per view, and accessing my copyrighted materials whenever they feel like it? Why can’t we have truly PRIVATE filehosting, where either the uploader or whomever they allow can access it – and NOBODY ELSE – including the filehost? Its a sad situation that our rights to have and use private assets have been trumped by the likes of MAFIAA and other organizations all in the name of “stopping piracy”.

    Yeah – piracy (sharing FOR PROFIT) is a bad thing; but they shouldn’t have unlimited power to stop it. Even law enforcement has to work within a set of laws, even though there are workarounds. But organizations like MAFIAA just seem to do whatever they want, with our tax dollars paying them in the form of free government services. They are allowed to make and change laws to suit their needs; which is a total travesty and miscarriage of justice. They should be relegated to finding and pursuing pirates at the civil level, with no free resources just like everybody else. If they can’t catch them, well tough chi-chis – our government(s) should not be bending over backwards to make the laws more efficient for them than any other infringement laws. The ISPs filehosts, linking sites, Usenet, irc, Torrent sites should not have any part in helping their cause, nor should they advocate for them. they should all come together and state that they will not co-operate with infringing on their users right to privacy and freedom of speech (expression). They should make a clear stand that they will not be held accountable for what their users are doing with their private files, and that they will not invade their users files by peering into them. the only thing they should be concerned about is malware, and as long as the files are clean thy have no responsibility or right to access them beyond simple storage.

    Unfortunately this is not the case, and companies like Rapidshare are just making things worse, for us and themselves. But of course – isn’t that the point of a sting operation?

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