MegaUpload Issues Response to RIAA Over Mastercard Cutoff
23 replies, posted
[url=http://www.zeropaid.com/news/91680/exclusive-megaupload-issues-response-to-riaa-over-mastercard-cutoff/]Source[/url], which is Megaupload's response to [url=http://www.zeropaid.com/news/91663/riaa-wants-mastercard-to-cut-off-megaupload/]This Article[/url]
[quote]
Yesterday, we reported on the RIAAs efforts to get Mastercard to cut off payments to MegaUpload. Today, we have received an exclusive response from MegaUpload on this news.
Blocking so-called “rogue websites” isn’t necessarily in the law books in the US yet, but things are heating up between the RIAA, MPAA and several websites they accuse of facilitating copyright infringement. Some of these sites, it turns out, are cyberlockers – websites that host large files for their users and allows for many to download those files as a side bonus of saving some companies bandwidth costs. Some note the recent strategy of pressuring payment methods to cut off funding from websites they accuse of duping consumers into paying for pirated content as a more recent change in strategy in the organizations strategy to fight piracy.
At issue specifically is the effort by the RIAA to get Mastercard to block payments to MegaUpload.
“MasterCard in particular deserves credit for its proactive approach to addressing rogue Web sites that dupe consumers,” Mitch Glazier, vice president of government and industry relations of the RIAA said. “They have reached out to us and others in the entertainment community to forge what we think will be a productive and effective partnership.”
It’s quite a statement that sparked an even more interesting statement from MegaUpload, one of the sites explicitly mentioned among these “rogue websites”
“Are payment processors trying to become the legislature of the new decade?” Bonnie Lam of MegaUpload Headquarters asks, “Will it be them, rather than elected governments, who decide what’s right and what’s wrong? Will ballots be replaced by wallets, will people cast their votes by choosing a conservative or a liberal credit card? First WikiLeaks, then cyberlockers – what’s next, and where will it end? Will you no longer be able to settle your ISP bill by MasterCard, as your carrier of choice may profit from copyright infringement?”
“We are watching the unfolding events with interest,” Lam told ZeroPaid, “but as the vast majority of our revenue is coming from advertising, the effect on our business would be limited.”
Ouch. Not quite the effect the RIAA or MPAA might have hoped with their recent actions.
Lam continued to defend MegaUpload, “Megaupload is a legitimate business operating within the boundaries of the law. In five years of operation we have not been sued by a single content owner. If the RIAA or MPAA would have legal grounds they would have taken us to court by now. We suggest that they attack us within the legal system and stop labeling us until they have something to show.”
It is true that the RIAA and MPAA have yet to try to litigate the company. It would indeed be hard with a copyright complaints system in place in that website where if a copyright holder sees their infringing material on MegaUpload, they can have the link taken down.
“Mega has over 100 million registered users,” Lam continued, “over 45 million daily unique visitors, employees of over 70% of the worlds fortune 500 companies have accounts with us.
We host over a billion legitimate files. Documents, backups, photos, everything. If Mastercard turns against Megaupload they will have a problem, not us.”
Indeed, it’s hard to see anyone who would lose out in all of this other than Mastercard.
One things for sure, things could get quite interesting in the weeks ahead between Mastercard, MegaUpload and the RIAA should these tensions keep rising.
We would like to thank Bonnie Lam for taking the time to respond on this issue.
[/quote]
tl:dr MasterCard joining record companies to cut off funding for some websites, MegaUpload says "try it".
This could open a can of worms for MasterCard later on down the line.
Megaupload is used for legit files? All i seen linked to it was wares.
[QUOTE=Intoxicated Spy;26922515]Megaupload is used for legit files? All i seen linked to it was wares.[/QUOTE]
It is, and so is bittorrent. The industry thinks otherwise, however.
[QUOTE=not_Morph53;26922547]It is, and so is bittorrent. The industry thinks otherwise, however.[/QUOTE]
I knew torrents were, since I do download linux distros, no really, i do.
[QUOTE=Intoxicated Spy;26922515]Megaupload is used for legit files? All i seen linked to it was wares.[/QUOTE]
I don't think so since it's a poor service to legally host files on, there's much better alternatives for that purposes.
People actually pay for megaupload? i just google links under 1 gb, most people have stuff that can be up to 7 parts in rar files
I use Megaupload for file upload all the time, and none of my files are infringing any copyright laws whatsoever
[editline]23rd December 2010[/editline]
Also, their hotlinking service is very useful and cheap for distributing large files for customers, making the selected files into direct links without the waiting time or cap.
[QUOTE=Intoxicated Spy;26922515]Megaupload is used for legit files? All i seen linked to it was wares.[/QUOTE]
Megaupload is used quite often to host patches, mods, free games, etc. And it's relatively fast even without a paid account.
[editline]23rd December 2010[/editline]
[QUOTE=johan_sm;26922597]I don't think so since it's a poor service to legally host files on, there's much better alternatives for that purposes.[/QUOTE]
The only thing that I can think of as a better alternative to Megaupload is Mediafire. Mediafire has no wait before downloads and no (AFAIK) download limits.
[QUOTE=Doriol;26922628]Megaupload is used quite often to host patches, mods, free games, etc. And it's relatively fast even without a paid account.[/QUOTE]
I usually get the torrent for mods and patches, most of the time its faster than download from a site, also, isn't File Front (now Game Front) use for patches most of the time?
[QUOTE=Intoxicated Spy;26922667]I usually get the torrent for mods and patches, most of the time its faster than download from a site, also, isn't File Front (now Game Front) use for patches most of the time?[/QUOTE]
Yes, but in my experience, FileFront doesn't compare to MegaUpload or Mediafire.
Yeah I can get up to 500kb/s off megaupload on a free account, compared to ~80-150kb/s from most other websites like rapidshare, filefront, etc. (My internet isn't great obviously, but that is a big difference in speed)
[QUOTE=not_Morph53;26922357]tl:dr MasterCard joining record companies to cut off funding for some websites[/QUOTE]
No, it doesn't say that anywhere in the article. It says that's what the RIAA wants, not what has happened.
I get around 1.4mb/s from Mediafire.
Yeah but can MasterCard block payments made over PayPal to them?
[QUOTE=Intoxicated Spy;26922667]I usually get the torrent for mods and patches, most of the time its faster than download from a site, also, isn't File Front (now Game Front) use for patches most of the time?[/QUOTE]
Haven't seen a filefront link in a while now
[QUOTE=TH89;26922718]No, it doesn't say that anywhere in the article. It says that's what the RIAA wants, not what has happened.[/QUOTE]
I know that, I hate it when people who only read one sentence summaries, so I'll mislead them.
[QUOTE=Doriol;26922725]I get around 1.4mb/s from Mediafire.[/QUOTE]
Same speeds from Filefront as well.
The RIAA are so crooked, they don't support the interests of their artists in the slightest. Why do people keep signing on with record labels that are a part of it? Labels like Sony Music and EMI need to just die.
Megaupload is like a content pack CDN for serverside HL2 mods that require clients to download models and such.
Megaupload is a website that allows uploading and downloading of software.
[QUOTE=S1N1337;26923915]Megaupload is a website that allows uploading and downloading of software.[/QUOTE]
and other files
[QUOTE=not_Morph53;26922821]I know that, I hate it when people who only read one sentence summaries, so I'll mislead them.[/QUOTE]
Don't do it again.
Megaupload shits on rapidshare
It's funny because I don't think I've ever seen a company go bust due to piracy.
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.