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Tuesday, January 31, 2012

MegaUpload user Data could be wiped...


 Data could be wiped by Thursday (2-2-2012) because company can't pay storage fees


                                


       The companies that store the data of millions of MegaUpload users plan to start deleting their accounts as early as Thursday.

        The site was shut down Jan. 19 following the arrest of seven men, including the company's founder Kim Dotcom, in New Zealand on U.S. accusations that they facilitated millions of illegal downloads of films, music and other content, costing copyright holders at least $500 million in lost revenue.
      MegaUpload employs Virginia-based storage companies Carpathia Hosting Inc. and Cogent Communications Group Inc. to store data uploaded by its users for a fee, but has not met its payment obligations because the government has frozen the firm's assets.
       Both companies filed a letter in U.S. court on Friday stating they will likely begin wiping data on Thursday.
     MegaUpload attorney Ira Rothken said the company is working with prosecutors to try to keep the data of at least 50 million users from being erased.
      Aside from its value to customers, the data is critical to MegaUpload's defence in the legal case, he said.
"We're cautiously optimistic at this point that because the United States, as well as MegaUpload, should have a common desire to protect consumers, that this type of agreement will get done."
      The FBI is seeking to extradite founder Kim Dotcom and three other men from New Zealand to the U.S. to face charges of conspiring to commit racketeering, conspiring to commit money laundering, copyright infringement, and aiding and abetting copyright infringement over the internet through the website MegaUpload.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Download Songs @ Google Music Manager



             You’d be right in assuming that downloading all your songs from a cloud locker service is a simple, standard feature. They’re your songs, after all. But with Google Music, you could only use its desktop app to download songs purchased through Google — not, for example, tracks you ripped from your own audio CDs and then uploaded to their servers. That’s finally changed.
          From now on, you’ll be given two bulk download options in Google Music Manager. You can download your purchased music only, or download your entire library in one fell swoop. That’s good news for any of you who took advantage of Google’s offer to store up to 20,000 of your favorite tunes in its cloud so that you could stream them to your Android devices. In the event of a catastrophic hard drive failure on your desktop, laptop, or media server, you’ll now be able to painlessly restore your music library with just a couple of clicks via Google Music Manager and your internet connection.
       A few other Google Music related tweaks were made yesterday as well. Via the web interface, you can now select individual tracks and have them pushed to a specific Android device. And in a not-too-unexpected move you can now quickly share purchased tracks with folks in your Google+ circles. Well, not the tracks themselves, but rather YouTube videos of those songs — provided Google has them at the ready and your friends aren’t geo-blocked from viewing them.
What’s next for the service? Possibly some sort of system that automatically replaces your low-quality versions with something better…?