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Mega Upload Shut Down!

thewalker

Well-known member
Jun 10, 2008
1,471
25
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Jennifer_

New member
.... and a new site went up last night but I think it's already been taken down.

This whole SOPA/PIPA thing is crazy.

I'm kinda shocked that no one has brought it up here. Did anyone not notice how 'Anonymous' took down the Dept of Justice, Univesal Music, BMI and a bunch of other sites yesterday?

The URL was http://109.236.83.66/ but it's down. Follow @YourAnonNews on Twitter
 

MattRoxx

Call me anti-fascist
Nov 13, 2011
6,752
3
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I get around.
.... and a new site went up last night but I think it's already been taken down.

This whole SOPA/PIPA thing is crazy.

I'm kinda shocked that no one has brought it up here. Did anyone not notice how 'Anonymous' took down the Dept of Justice, Univesal Music, BMI and a bunch of other sites yesterday?

The URL was http://109.236.83.66/ but it's down. Follow @YourAnonNews on Twitter
I rarely visit the US Dept of Justice website :)
What's crazy is that SOPA/PIPA has not been enacted. So shutting down the website because of a few illegal downloaders demonstrates that the new legislation is not really needed.
 

Jennifer_

New member
I rarely visit the US Dept of Justice website :)
.... My Facebook and Twitter were dominated by the topic yesterday ~ I was pretty-surprised that it didn't come up here. The legislation is losing support after the protests of two days-ago.

http://rt.com/usa/news/anonymous-doj-universal-sopa-235/

Anonymous downs government, music industry sites in largest attack ever

Hacktivists with the collective Anonymous are waging an attack on the website for the White House after successfully breaking the sites for the FBI, Department of Justice, Universal Music Group, RIAA and Motion Picture Association of America.
In response to today’s federal raid on the file sharing service Megaupload, hackers with the online collective Anonymous have broken the websites for the FBI, Department of Justice, Universal Music Group, RIAA, Motion Picture Association of America and Warner Music Group.
“It was in retaliation for Megaupload, as was the concurrent attack on Justice.org,” Anonymous operative Barrett Brown tells RT on Thursday afternoon.
Only hours before the DoJ and Universal sites went down, news broke that Megaupload, a massive file sharing site with a reported 50 million daily users, was taken down by federal agents. Four people linked to Megaupload were arrested in New Zealand and an international crackdown led agents to serving at least 20 search warrants across the globe.
The latest of sites to fall is FBI.gov, which finally broke at around 7:40 pm EST Thursday evening.
Less than an hour after the DoJ and Universal sites came down, the website for the RIAA, or Recording Industry Association of America, went offline as well. Shortly before 6 p.m EST, the government's Copyright.gov site went down as well. Thirty minutes later came the site for BMI, or Broadcast Music, Inc, the licensing organization that represents some of the biggest names in music.
Also on Thursday, MPAA.org returned an error as Anonymous hacktivists managed to bring down the website for the Motion Picture Association of America. The group, headed by former senator Chris Dodd, is an adamant supporter of both PIPA and SOPA legislation.
Universal Music Group, or UMG, is the largest record company in the United States and under its umbrella are the labels Interscope-Geffen-A&M, the Island Def Jam Motown Music Group and Mercury Records.
Brown adds that “more is coming” and Anonymous-aligned hacktivists are pursuing a joint effort with others to “damage campaign raising abilities of remaining Democrats who support SOPA.”
Although many members of Congress have just this week changed their stance on the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act, or SOPA, the raid on Megaupload Thursday proved that the feds don’t need SOPA or its sister legislation, PIPA, in order to pose a threat to the Web.
Brown adds that operatives involved in the project will use an “experimental campaign” and search engine optimization techniques “whereby to forever saddle some of these congressmen with their record on this issue.”
 

GG2

Mr. Debonair
Apr 8, 2011
3,183
0
0
This sucks, it was my go-to site for free movies and TV shows in high quality.
Megaupload was certainly one of the biggest if not the biggest. But you can still scour these for movies and shows:

Rapidshare
Hotfile
FileSonic
Wupload
Uploaded
Letitbit
Extabit
FileServe
Mediafire
Depositfiles
Netload
Crocko
Filefactory
Badongo
4shared
Przeklej
Dump
Uploading
Storage
Megashares
Furk
4FastFile
UploadBox
GoldFile
GigaSize
Enterupload
TurboBit
Diglo
HitFile
Oron
Kickload
ZippyShare
SoundCloud
BitShare
PiggyShare
UploadStation
FreakShare
x7
SpeedyShare
Fyels
 

MattRoxx

Call me anti-fascist
Nov 13, 2011
6,752
3
0
I get around.
.... My Facebook and Twitter were dominated by the topic yesterday ~ I was pretty-surprised that it didn't come up here. The legislation is losing support after the protests of two days-ago.

http://rt.com/usa/news/anonymous-doj-universal-sopa-235/

Anonymous downs government, music industry sites in largest attack ever

Hacktivists with the collective Anonymous are waging an attack on the website for the White House after successfully breaking the sites for the FBI, Department of Justice, Universal Music Group, RIAA and Motion Picture Association of America.
In response to today’s federal raid on the file sharing service Megaupload, hackers with the online collective Anonymous have broken the websites for the FBI, Department of Justice, Universal Music Group, RIAA, Motion Picture Association of America and Warner Music Group.
“It was in retaliation for Megaupload, as was the concurrent attack on Justice.org,” Anonymous operative Barrett Brown tells RT on Thursday afternoon.
Only hours before the DoJ and Universal sites went down, news broke that Megaupload, a massive file sharing site with a reported 50 million daily users, was taken down by federal agents. Four people linked to Megaupload were arrested in New Zealand and an international crackdown led agents to serving at least 20 search warrants across the globe.
Thanks, I knew there were protests but didn't realize how widespread they were. The Daily Show with Jon Stewart had a few minutes about SOPA/PIPA. One of the big drawbacks with the US Congress is that it's obvious many of the legislators don't know much about what they're doing, and take their marching orders from the corporations who fund their election campaigns.

I like what Anonymous does in reaction to draconian gov't policies but wish they could also have a more focused positive influence on events. Shutting down gov't sites demonstrates the futility of trying to "control" the internet, but it is not going to stop laws from being enacted.

Jennifer, don't tell the authorities, it will be our little secret - I was part of the Anonymous protest against Scientology back in 2008 and took some photos of the demonstration:



 

GG2

Mr. Debonair
Apr 8, 2011
3,183
0
0
The legislation is too vague and won't pass, but you can be sure that new or modified versions of the legislation will be introduced in the future.
 

Rockslinger

Banned
Apr 24, 2005
32,776
0
0
The legislation is losing support after the protests of two days-ago.
This shows the power of protests. The creators of music and movies are not enjoying the fruits of their creativity and labour, but that's ok because we all want everything for free. BTW: The protestors also killed Keystone. We are now ruled by protestors and not reason or logic.
 

WoodPeckr

Protuberant Member
May 29, 2002
47,042
6,051
113
North America
thewoodpecker.net
We are now ruled by protestors and not reason or logic.
Come on BIG Money rules us!!!
We were NEVER ruled by reason or logic. The protesters are merely highlighting this verity not ruling us......;)
 

simon482

internets icon
Feb 8, 2009
9,966
175
63
it's already been veto's and voted down by the majority and obama said no chance. the guy that started it said he will try again in march but everyone has already told him won't happen then either.

the online group anonymous went on a spree yesterday hacking into and shutting down websites as a pay back for mega upload folks being arrested.
 

colt

Member
Mar 26, 2002
334
0
16
53
I have not looked at SOPA or PIPA too closely and understand there may be some concerns about having search engines such as Google. or other corps not actively engaged in IP theft, effectively censure the internet. Having said the focus of most protestors seems to be their concern that they may no longer be able to commit widespread IP theft on a regular basis. There is no logical, rationale or legal argument that supports the notion that what goes on on p2p filesharing sites, torrents or streaming sites is anything other than IP theft. I was listening to a Toronto radio station the other day and one caller said that because he had to "pack a lunch" and go to work every day musicians should have to do the same thing - and they could just tour to make $$$. In other words, the musicians had no real "right" to profit off their creative and recording talents. That seems to be about the intellectual height the "debate" over p2p filesharing rises to. There is no legitimate debate - it is theft.

As for the p2p sites who say they don't actually retain files on their sites and are therefore doing nothing wrong the concepts of civil conspiracy and willful blindness are both established in most legal systems in the world and, perhaps with some tweaking by statute, could easily be utilized to impose liability on the sites.
 

Jennifer_

New member
.... it's much more than preventing illegal downloading.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:SOPA_initiative/Learn_more

http://gizmodo.com/5877000/what-is-sopa

What Is SOPA?
If you hadn't heard of SOPA before, you probably have by now: Some of the internet's most influential sites—Reddit and Wikipedia among them—are going dark to protest the much-maligned anti-piracy bill. But other than being a very bad thing, what is SOPA? And what will it mean for you if it passes?
SOPA is an anti-piracy bill working its way through Congress...
House Judiciary Committee Chair and Texas Republican Lamar Smith, along with 12 co-sponsors, introduced the Stop Online Piracy Act on October 26th of last year. Debate on H.R. 3261, as it's formally known, has consisted of one hearing on November 16th and a "mark-up period" on December 15th, which was designed to make the bill more agreeable to both parties. Its counterpart in the Senate is the Protect IP Act (S. 968). Also known by its cuter-but-still-deadly name: PIPA. There will likely be a vote on PIPA next Wednesday; SOPA discussions had been placed on hold but will resume in February of this year.

...that would grant content creators extraordinary power over the internet...
The beating heart of SOPA is the ability of intellectual property owners (read: movie studios and record labels) to effectively pull the plug on foreign sites against whom they have a copyright claim. If Warner Bros., for example, says that a site in Italy is torrenting a copy of The Dark Knight, the studio could demand that Google remove that site from its search results, that PayPal no longer accept payments to or from that site, that ad services pull all ads and finances from it, and—most dangerously—that the site's ISP prevent people from even going there.

...which would go almost comedically unchecked...
Perhaps the most galling thing about SOPA in its original construction is that it let IP owners take these actions without a single court appearance or judicial sign-off. All it required was a single letter claiming a "good faith belief" that the target site has infringed on its content. Once Google or PayPal or whoever received the quarantine notice, they would have five days to either abide or to challenge the claim in court. Rights holders still have the power to request that kind of blockade, but in the most recent version of the bill the five day window has softened, and companies now would need the court's permission.

The language in SOPA implies that it's aimed squarely at foreign offenders; that's why it focuses on cutting off sources of funding and traffic (generally US-based) rather than directly attacking a targeted site (which is outside of US legal jurisdiction) directly. But that's just part of it.

...to the point of potentially creating an "Internet Blacklist"...
Here's the other thing: Payment processors or content providers like Visa or YouTube don't even need a letter shut off a site's resources. The bill's "vigilante" provision gives broad immunity to any provider who proactively shutters sites it considers to be infringers. Which means the MPAA just needs to publicize one list of infringing sites to get those sites blacklisted from the internet.

Potential for abuse is rampant. As Public Knowledge points out, Google could easily take it upon itself to delist every viral video site on the internet with a "good faith belief" that they're hosting copyrighted material. Leaving YouTube as the only major video portal. Comcast (an ISP) owns NBC (a content provider). Think they might have an interest in shuttering some rival domains? Under SOPA, they can do it without even asking for permission.

...while exacting a huge cost from nearly every site you use daily...
SOPA also includes an "anti-circumvention" clause, which holds that telling people how to work around SOPA is nearly as bad as violating its main provisions. In other words: if your status update links to The Pirate Bay, Facebook would be legally obligated to remove it. Ditto tweets, YouTube videos, Tumblr or WordPress posts, or sites indexed by Google. And if Google, Twitter, Wordpress, Facebook, etc. let it stand? They face a government "enjoinment." They could and would be shut down.

The resources it would take to self-police are monumental for established companies, and unattainable for start-ups. SOPA would censor every online social outlet you have, and prevent new ones from emerging.

...and potentially disappearing your entire digital life...
The party line on SOPA is that it only affects seedy off-shore torrent sites. That's false. As the big legal brains at Bricoleur point out, the potential collateral damage is huge. And it's you. Because while Facebook and Twitter have the financial wherewithal to stave off anti-circumvention shut down notices, the smaller sites you use to store your photos, your videos, and your thoughts may not. If the government decides any part of that site infringes on copyright and proves it in court? Poof. Your digital life is gone, and you can't get it back.

...while still managing to be both unnecessary and ineffective...
What's saddest about SOPA is that it's pointless on two fronts. In the US, the MPAA, and RIAA already have the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to request that infringing material be taken down. We've all seen enough "video removed" messages to know that it works just fine.

As for the foreign operators, you might as well be throwing darts at a tse-tse fly. The poster child of overseas torrenting, Pirate Bay, has made it perfectly clear that they're not frightened in the least. And why should they be? Its proprietors have successfully evaded any technological attempt to shut them down so far. Its advertising partners aren't US-based, so they can't be choked out. But more important than Pirate Bay itself is the idea of Pirate Bay, and the hundreds or thousands of sites like it, as populous and resilient as mushrooms in a marsh. Forget the question of should SOPA succeed. It's incredibly unlikely that it could. At least at its stated goals.

...but stands a shockingly good chance of passing...
SOPA is, objectively, an unfeasible trainwreck of a bill, one that willfully misunderstands the nature of the internet and portends huge financial and cultural losses. The White House has come out strongly against it. As have hundreds of venture capitalists and dozens of the men and women who helped build the internet in the first place. In spite of all this, companies have already spent a lot of money pushing SOPA, and it remains popular in the House of Representatives.

That mark-up period on December 15th, the one that was supposed to transform the bill into something more manageable? Useless. Twenty sanity-fueled amendments were flat-out rejected. And while the bill's most controversial provision—mandatory DNS filtering—was thankfully taken off the table recently, in practice internet providers would almost certainly still use DNS as a tool to shut an accused site down.

...unless we do something about it.
The momentum behind the anti-SOPA movement has been slow to build, but we're finally at a saturation point. Wikipedia, BoingBoing, WordPress, TwitPic: they'll all be dark on January 18th. An anti-SOPA rally has been planned for tomorrow afternoon in New York. The list of companies supporting SOPA is long but shrinking, thanks in no small part to the emails and phone calls they've received in the last few months.

So keep calling. Keep emailing. Most of all, keep making it known that the internet was built on the same principles of freedom that this country was. It should be afforded to the same right
I think Anonymous' ''attack'' was in large part due to the fact that by removing Megaupload (on the day after the legislation was put aside), the government is proving that it intends to push legislation similar to SOPA/PIPA through in the near-future. It's not so much about illegal downloading, it's the fact that government wants to control and censor the internet.
 

simon482

internets icon
Feb 8, 2009
9,966
175
63
it pretty much says anything that has been copyrighted by anyone at anytime is not allowed to be used. you will get more jail time than the guy that killed micheal jackson if you upload a micheal jackson song. who ever owns whatever image you post will have the right to shut down your website without an investigation to see if it is infringed in the first place. hell this entire site can be shut down because a bait and switch operation used a pic that was copyrighted somewhere else.

there will be lots of ways around it of course. the sites that matter are already putting things in place so the servers they use are in countries that don't care about the u.s rules. they will still run business as usual. this legislation which will never pass is basically a slap in the face to the first amendment and americans are way to proud of their shit to let that happen. all this will do in the long run is create more pirates.
 

Aardvark154

New member
Jan 19, 2006
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I think Anonymous' ''attack'' was in large part due to the fact that by removing Megaupload (on the day after the legislation was put aside), the government is proving that it intends to push legislation similar to SOPA/PIPA through in the near-future. It's not so much about illegal downloading, it's the fact that government wants to control and censor the internet.
Frankly no, it is that a bunch of spoiled brats with technical skills don't believe that they should have to pay to watch movies or suffer through ads that take the place of payment.

This action against Mega Upload took place under already existing law.
 

Jennifer_

New member
.... I have a few friends who are music producers. They share music via megaupload and soundcloud. They rely on these sites to get their name out.
Not everyone is using these sites to 'steal' copyrighted material.
But the whole site went down and everything was lost.
The SOPA / PIPA stuff would affect the world wide web with American legislation. Facebook, Google, You-Tube, Twitter, Soundcloud, etc . etc. etc. would have to police their sites constantly. Websites would be blacklisted - the original draft of the legislation only required someone with vested interest in copyrighted material going up on a site to file a complaint. Initially there would be no judge and jury - the site would have no option other than to remove the content.

If websites are blacklisted, Google would not be allowed to list them in search results. Is that not censorship? I have more to say but no time lol - hope this is semi-readable :p
 

richaceg

Well-known member
Feb 11, 2009
13,131
4,818
113
has anyone here heard of piratebay.org? i heard these guys were untouchables. any info?
 

simon482

internets icon
Feb 8, 2009
9,966
175
63
Frankly no, it is that a bunch of spoiled brats with technical skills don't believe that they should have to pay to watch movies or suffer through ads that take the place of payment.

This action against Mega Upload took place under already existing law.
actually no. anonymous is a group of highly skilled computer guys that attack everyone that tries to fuck with people's rights. yeah mega upload was killed under existing law, that is cool and all. why go after them, they are only 13th most popular, you tube has the same material but they are left alone when they are a lot higher up the list.

i don't agree with everything anonymous does but this time they were justified.
 
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