Piracy Abound
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The IFPI said that the research institute Czech Academy of Sciences was recently the unwitting host of a server that powered one of the largest pre-release music archives in the world, and with the help of Czech police, the server and its 4TB of data has been shut down. The site is temporarily out of business.
The Academy of Sciences is a group of 7,000 scientists doing basic research that is funded by the Czech government, but the IFPI says that the Blind Alley server was owned by a private group simply renting space in an Academy data center. It had a fast line to the Internet and served several release groups that specialize in throwing up copies of unreleased music. The IFPI says the server was “one of the most powerful” it has ever shut down.
The IFPI has spearheaded several such high-profile raids in recent months, focusing more on major servers than on individual downloaders. Last October, with the help of UK police, the invite-only OiNK tracker was closed. At the time, the IFPI called it the “primary source worldwide for illegal prerelease music,” but it was far from the only one. Major trackers like Canadas Demonoid were busted, and Polish police even shut down servers in Wroclaw.
The major labels dont really have much choice but to adopt this strategy, even though its a bit like playing Whac-A-Mole. Last July, the EUs top court, the European Court of Justice, ruled that ISPs did not need to disclose subscriber information in civil copyright infringement lawsuits. The ruling was validated by the court in January, and it took the RIAA’s