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ArtikelMegaupload and the Twilight of Copyright  
Oleh: Parloff, Roger
Jenis: Article from Bulletin/Magazine
Dalam koleksi: Fortune vol. 166 no. 2 (Jul. 2012), page 78-88.
Topik: Cyberblocker; Copyright Infringement; Illegal Distribution of Copyrighted Material
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  • Perpustakaan Pusat (Semanggi)
    • Nomor Panggil: FF16.48
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Isi artikelKim Dotcom's business facilitated more online piracy than the mind can conceive. Yet it might have been legal. How did we get here? Is there any way out? Until recently Megaupload was one of a number of lucrative, businesses known as cyberlockers, which are the latest generation of operations created in the image of the original Napster -- the pioneering file-sharing service that launched in 1999 and was shut down by court order in 2001. In January an Alexandria, Va., federal grand jury charged Megaupload and seven top officials with a racketeering conspiracy focused on aiding and abetting criminal copyright infringement. The government alleges that the defendants, led by Kim Dotcom, a.k.a. Kim Schmitz, a.k.a. Kim Tim Jim Vestor, made $175 million from a business built on facilitating the illegal distribution of at least $500 million worth of copyrighted movies, music, television shows, books, images, videogames, and software.*
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