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01-21-2013, 09:56 PM
Post: #1
Kim Dotcom starts new file-sharing site (New MEgaupload.com Site)
The founder of megaupload is up to something again!
Megaupload boss Kim Dotcom has set up a new cloud storage and file-sharing site.

Mega, a web-based service
that lets people upload and store files of any kind, is a sequel to the
Megaupload system that was shut down last January.

Police raids on the offices and home of Kim Dotcom led to the closure of Megaupload.

The Mega site went online on Sunday, followed by a lavish launch party held at Mr Dotcom's New Zealand mansion.

Mr Dotcom, who was born Kim Schmitz, has said the new site
complies with the law and warned that attempts to take it down would be
futile.

"This is not some kind of finger to the US government or to Hollywood," he said on Saturday.

"Legally, there's just nothing there that could be used to
shut us down. This site is just as legitimate and has the right to exist
as Dropbox, Boxnet and other competitors."

Extradition hearing
Hours after the site was launched, Mr Dotcom tweeted that it had received 250,000 user registrations, although limited server capacity meant Mega was unreachable to many.

In a series of earlier tweets Mr Dotcom said every customer
would have 50 gigabytes of free storage - far more than is offered by
rival services such as Dropbox or Microsoft's SkyDrive.



[Image: _65398928_ijzbmgbj.jpg]

Kim Dotcom held a lavish launch party for Mega at his mansion in New Zealand

Mega will be encrypted so only those who upload data have access to it.

Data is also being held in the cloud to make it easy for users to get and share files.

The 2012 raids on Megaupload were carried out because, said
US law enforcement, many users of Megaupload were engaged in pirating
content and illegally sharing it.

They accused Mr Dotcom, and other managers at Megaupload of profiting from piracy.

At the launch party for Mega, Mr Dotcom made light of the
incident, re-enacting the raid on his mansion by New Zealand authorities
with a helicopter and actors dressed as armed police.

He has rebuffed the accusations of piracy and is fighting a legal battle to stay in New Zealand from where he ran Megaupload.

A hearing on whether he can be extradited to the US has now been delayed until August.

The case has generated controversy in New Zealand over the
way the police and intelligence services gathered evidence before the
raid and won an apology to Mr Dotcom from the country's prime minister.

Mr Dotcom has also won support from prominent computer pioneers such as Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

The raid on Megaupload put 25 petabytes of data uploaded to it by its 50 million members into a legal limbo.

In one message, Mr Dotcom said he was working with lawyers
and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which campaigns on digital
rights issues, to get access to that seized data and return it to users.


Code:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-21106584
01-22-2013, 11:11 PM
Post: #2
RE:
gotta love him...
01-31-2013, 11:47 AM
Post: #3
RE:
I will not come back to Mega unless they return what i uploaded there.
02-25-2013, 07:08 AM
Post: #4
RE:
I wouldn't trust it. He's too brave.
Me thinks he's rolled over, cooperating with law enforcement.
Sounds like a honeypot to me. Beware.




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