Kim Dotcom 'preparing launch of new music site Megabox'

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Mike Manson

Still Livin'
Apr 16, 2005
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#1
Kim Dotcom is preparing to launch a new music site called Megabox, he has claimed.

A video teaser, posted on YouTube on Wednesday, showed off search, community, location and sentiment tracking features, and showed a developer team apparently working on the site with the introduction: "This is what they don't want you to have. Unchaining artists and fans. Megabox is coming soon."

The video followed a tweet on Saturday that claimed: "Code was 90% done. Servers on the way. Lawyers, partners and investors ready. Be patient. It's coming."

Today's teaser highlighted four artists – The Black Keys, Rusko, Two Fingers and will.i.am – as "exclusive" artists that are part of a site that Dotcom has said will "give artists full control over their work". The site is understood to let users access music for free and compensate artists with a share of advertising revenue by using the Megakey app, which would replace existing ads with Megabox adverts.

Megabox appears to be a reinvention of the infamous MegaUpload site that led to Dotcom's dramatic arrest on 20 January this year. Dotcom has been charged with internet piracy and breaking copyright laws with a business that made as much as $175m (£100m) allegedly distributing copyrighted material. Now released on bail, Dotcom faces fresh attempts by the US authorities to extradite him but will not face an extradition hearing until March 2013.

Dotcom's arrest and the closure of Megaupload.com by the US Department of Justice triggered attacks on several high profile sites including the DoJ and Universal Music.

The New Zealand government was forced to apologise to the entrepreneur today after an official report showed that the country's spy agency had carried out illegal surveillance on him.

But house arrest has not deterred the industrious German national, who officially changed his name from Kim Schmitz in 2005. Dotcom has entertained himself by making music videos with his family, as well as hosting visits from people including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

Kim Dotcom 'preparing launch of new music site Megabox' | Technology | guardian.co.uk
 

infinity

( o )( o )
May 4, 2005
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#2
Me.ga

Kim Dotcom just announced where Megaupload will be reborn: Me.ga. As in, that’s the new file sharing website that will officially launch on January 20th next year. Go check it out.
Right now, it’s only a splash page that’s up at me.ga but it describes how Mega will work, details how to become a hosting partner and how to become a Mega API partner and asks for investors as well.

So how is the new me.ga different from the old and fed-killed Megaupload? All the data is encrypted by Mega so that “you hold the keys to what you store in the cloud, not us.” Basically, it’s going to be different because Mega literally won’t know what you upload. Can’t wait to see it in action when it launches on January 20th. [Me.ga]
source
 
Props: :ab:
Jan 29, 2005
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#4
So this fool beat his case?
not yet, it says he has an extradition hearing in March 2013 where the US is gonna try and get New Zealand to send him here to face the charges.


don't really understand how the US thinks it has any sort of jurisdiction to arrest a German born New Zealand citizen for an internet copyright "crime". Hopefully NZ tells the US government to fuck off.
 

infinity

( o )( o )
May 4, 2005
16,189
64,829
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UOENO, CA
#5
This dude is a boss

Dotcom's broadband plan

Excerpt:
Kim Dotcom is proposing free broadband to all New Zealanders as he tries to resurrect the ill-fated Pacific Fibre cable connecting New Zealand to the United States.
Dotcom last night revealed his ambitious plans to build the $400m cable - which would double New Zealand's bandwidth - set up his new Me.ga company, creating jobs and a data centre to service the rest of the world.
 

infinity

( o )( o )
May 4, 2005
16,189
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UOENO, CA
#6
The US is trying to fuck him & he wants to build a $400m cable connecting his country to ours. lol. That would be a nice slap in the face to the US gov't.
 

Mike Manson

Still Livin'
Apr 16, 2005
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#12


Auckland, New Zealand (CNN) -- It was a busy weekend, but Kim Dotcom was feeling relaxed.
He was in boyish good spirits as around 150 contractors buzzed around his mansion and its acres of grounds, building a giant "Mega" sign on the front lawn and erecting a mobile stage that production company MadAnt says is New Zealand's largest. He mugged for the camera and joked "it's another raid" as a helicopter flew overhead.
The world's most controversial Internet tycoon was preparing to launch his site at 6:48am on Sunday morning -- a year to the minute after his New Zealand mansion was raided and his old service was shut down by the authorities. (Some press, including Ars Technica, received an early look at the site.)
Ars Technica freelancer Chris Keall spoke with Dotcom on January 18 at his mansion outside Auckland, discussing topics ranging from Mega's business model to legal threats that may come back to bite his business.
"I would have the same fears"
Megaupload founder's lavish lifestyle
In its heyday, Megaupload had around 50 million unique users -- none of whom have regained access to their files since the site was taken offline. We put the most obvious question to Dotcom first: why should users trust him with their data at all? Wouldn't it be legitimate for users to be spooked by Mega, and refuse to go near it?
"You are certainly right," Dotcom conceded. "If I [were] a user of Megaupload, I would probably have the same fears. There will be users who chose not to work with us because of that, and that is unfortunate."
But Dotcom hopes that enough users will value the service he's offering: all-encrypted storage that can't be opened by anyone—even the host. He knows there will be a lot of people coming to check things out in the weeks to come and first impressions matter.
"There will also be a lot of users who just want to try this new service and see how good it is," he said. "Once they realize there is really no alternative to this service right now in terms of safety and privacy, I think there will be a lot of users who will use this. And over time, you know, when the service is live for a few months and people see these guys are still here, I think the trust will grow."
The jovial pre-launch atmosphere is only broken when Dotcom and his lawyer Ira Rothken are reminded that this week U.S. prosecutors have raised the possibility of fresh charges if the Mega launch goes ahead—an act that could be interpreted as violating a key bail condition Dotcom signed in by affidavit: not to relaunch Mega, or a similar service.
Rothken angrily rejects the notion that Dotcom is violating bail conditions. "Mr. Dotcom is working in consultation with top notch NZ defense counsel on bail compliance," he said. "[He] is innocent, is presumed innocent, and is entitled to innovate and work in technology like any other innocent New Zealander especially when the U.S. takes away all his assets and delays the extradition proceedings."
Nothing in Dotcom's bail conditions or US law precludes his engaging in lawful business, including Internet and technology businesses, said Rothken.
Embracing even the "smallest, most unreliable" hosts
The Mega business plan will be a distributed model, with hundreds of companies large and small, around the world, hosting files. A hosting company can be huge or it can own just two or three servers Dotcom says—just as long as it's located outside the U.S.
"Each file will be kept with at least two different hosters, [in] at least two different locations," said Dotcom. "That's a great added benefit for us because you can work with the smallest, most unreliable [hosting] companies. It doesn't matter because they can't do anything with that data."
More than 1,000 hosts answered a request for expressions of interest on the Mega home page. Dotcom says several hundred will be active partners within months. Successful hosts will get paid E500 per month per server; each server needs to supply 24 hard drives with 72 terabytes of storage and one gigabit of bandwidth, among other requirements.
That's all down the road, however. For now, Mega is launching with just one, professional, hosting operator—a subsidiary of Cogent, based in Dotcom's home country of Germany.
Dotcom says he needed a rock-solid setup for the launch and an operator who could rapidly scale if traffic and hosting requirements suddenly go through the roof after the January 20 launch (he had hoped to have a server rack operating in New Zealand for the launch as well, but says capacity on the Telecom/Singtel/Verizon-owned Southern Cross Cable was prohibitive).
The Washington DC-based, Nasdaq-listed Cogent was one of the suppliers of infrastructure and hosting services to Megaupload before its 2012 take-down. According to the indictment, Megaupload was paying Cogent around $1 million a month to lease "approximately thirty-six computer servers in Washington, DC and France." It was a substantial contract, although one that was dwarfed by that of Virginia-based Carpathia Hosting, where the bulk of Megaupload files were hosted, and are still stranded.
Cogent's fate was closely enough tied to Megaupload that its shares dropped 23 percent in a day after last year's raid, from $19.20 to $15.43. By mid-March, however, the stock had rebounded strongly; it closed recently at $24.11.
Having Cogent back on board is a source of pride for Dotcom; a major public hosting company has made a vote of confidence in his business plan for Mega. He was about to go into further detail on Cogent's hosting operation in Germany when his lawyer Ira Rothken—in Auckland for the launch and sitting in on the interview—stopped him, citing security concerns if the specific location was revealed.
Launching the most lawyered-up startup in tech history
The Mega business plan has been vetted by more than 20 lawyers across the US and New Zealand, Dotcom says—including those at Rothken's firm, and New Zealand law firms Simpson Grierson (one of the largest corporate law firms in NZ) and Lowndes Jordan (an intellectual property specialist). Also on Team Mega are two independent lawyers capable of handling the most difficult work: Queen's Counsel Paul Davison (often cited as the most expensive lawyer in New Zealand) and Guyon Foley—a criminal lawyer who made his mark prosecuting cases for the police before "switching sides," so to speak.
"This startup is probably the most scrutinized by lawyers in the history of tech startups," Dotcom claims.
Dotcom says it's inevitable Hollywood and music labels will "heckle" Mega "going by their past aggression ... they can't help themselves" (and there was certainly a foretaste of possible trouble to come this week as Mediaworks, which owns one of the two big radio networks in NZ, pulled ads for Mega from its stations; an insider said the move followed pressure from music and movie advertisers).
Rothken says anybody who comes after Mega has no case.
"You have companies like Dropbox and Google with Drive with materially similar technologies, and they are in business and they're thriving—and Mega adds encryption," he says.
But doesn't encryption add a sinister edge? After all, encryption means Mega will be like the Swiss bank of online storage services; customers could easily use the technology to hide, say, pirated movies or child porn.
Rothken responds that many technologies have dual uses, but on balance provide more public good. That's how the VCR stayed on the market, despite facilitating video piracy. The same argument applies to cloud computing as a whole, he says.
For good measure, Rothken also notes that former Deputy Homeland Security Advisor Richard Falkenrath wrote about encryption as a desirable feature for cloud computing services ("You don't really need to know where your data is. As long as you know it is safely wrapped in an at-rest encryption cocoon, you should feel secure," the advisor wrote.)
Dotcom adds in that although other services don't have a one-click encryption option built into their interface, the likes of Google Drive allow you to upload encrypted, password-protected files. Dotcom and Rothken's arguments are well rehearsed and, on the face of things, have a solid logic.
But Dotcom, by his own admission, says the apparent movie and music industry push against the Mega radio ads was an "emotional reaction" from the content industry. Those feelings remain. Even with the best precautions, attempts to shut down Mega—and shut up Dotcom—are unlikely to stop.