Rapidshare Told By Court To Remove Pirated Digital Books

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  • admin
    Administrator
    • Nov 2001
    • 9952

    Rapidshare Told By Court To Remove Pirated Digital Books

    A Hamburg court has ordered file uploading service Rapidshare to remove pirated copies of digital books that its users have uploaded, and have ordered the website to put in measures to prevent future uploads of pirated eBooks.

    Rapidshare currently services 42 million users per day, allowing users to upload and download shared files. It has quickly become a very popular way to download pirated content, including eBooks, as it removes the need to use BitTorrent clients that may be speed limited by network operators.

    A quick search on third party Rapidshare search engines quickly reveals a long list of suspected pirated content, everything from the latest songs to movies, games and digital books. Some similar operators do have active scanning of uploaded content and block those suspected of being copyrighted.

    While much of the focus has been on targeting Torrent websites, websites like Rapidshare, unlike Torrent websites, do actually host the pirated content on their servers and make it available for others to download. This latest court decision may prompt Hollywood and the music industry to take similar action against Rapidshare in the near future.

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  • admin
    Administrator
    • Nov 2001
    • 9952

    #2
    A follow up to this story. The publisher that brought the case forward against RapidShare said that RapidShare breached the injunction shortly after the original decision, when the publishers did a search on RapidShare and found the pirated books still readily available.

    They asked the court to impose fines on RapidShare, and the court has just done that, handing out a 150,000 Euro fine for RapidShare.

    The court has again ordered RapidShare to place word filters to prevent unauthorised user uploads and downloads.

    More:

    Earlier this year, cyberlocker service RapidShare was ordered by a court to remove nearly 150 electronic books from its archives and prevent users from re-uploading them by implementing a filter. According to the publishers who brought the case, RapidShare quickly breached the injunction. Today, the Regional Court of Hamburg agreed and hit the file-hosting company with a 150,000 euro fine.
    Visit Digital Digest and dvdloc8.com, My Blog

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