U.S. federal prosecutors are fine with Megaupload users recovering
their data -- as long as they pay for it. The government's position was
explained in a court filing on Friday concerning one of the many interesting
side issues that has emerged from the shutdown of Megaupload, formerly one of
the most highly trafficked file-sharing sites. Prosecutors were responding to a
motion filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation in late March on behalf of
Kyle Goodwin, an Ohio-based sports reporter who used Megaupload legitimately
for storing videos. Goodwin's hard drive crashed, and he lost access to the
data he backed up on Megaupload when the site was shut down on Jan. 19 on
criminal copyright infringement charges. U.S. law allows for third parties who
have an interest in forfeited property to make a claim. But the government
argues that it only copied part of the Megaupload data and the physical servers
were never seized. Megaupload's 1,103 servers -- which hold upwards of 28
petabytes of data -- are still held by Carpathia Hosting, the government said. "Access
is not the issue -- if it was, Mr. Goodwin could simply hire a forensic expert
to retrieve what he claims is his property and reimburse Carpathia for its
associated costs," the response said. "The issue is that the process
of identifying, copying, and returning Mr. Goodwin's data will be inordinately
expensive, and Mr. Goodwin wants the government, or Megaupload, or Carpathia,
or anyone other than himself, to bear the cost." The government also
suggested that if Megaupload or Carpathia violated a term of service or
contract, Goodwin could "sue Megaupload or Carpathia or recover his
losses." The issue of what to do with Megaupload's data has been hanging
around for a while. Carpathia contends it costs US$9,000 a day to maintain.
Megaupload's assets are frozen, so it has asked a court to make the DOJ pay for
preserving the data, which may be needed for its defense. So far, the issue
remains unresolved. Meanwhile, Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom is free on bail,
living in his rented home near Auckland and awaiting extradition proceedings to
begin in August. Dotcom along with Finn Batato, Julius Bencko, Sven Echternach,
Mathias Ortmann, Andrus Nomm and Bram Van Der Kolk are charged with criminal
copyright infringement and money laundering. The men -- along with two
companies -- are accused of collecting advertising and subscription fees from
users for faster download speeds of material stored on Megaupload. Prosecutors
allege the website and its operators collected US$175 million in criminal
proceeds, costing copyright holders more than $500 billion in damages to
copyright holders.
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