Ive just been to lokitorrent and they have been shut down :no:
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Ive just been to lokitorrent and they have been shut down :no:
Quote:
Lokitorrent, an extremely popular BitTorrent website, now has an MPAA message as its homepage.
The site recently gathered over $40,000 as funds for fighting the court case that was brought upon them by the MPAA. They vowed to fight for the BitTorrent community. However, the site has been up and down over the last few days, and now the site reads the following:
"This website has been permanently shut down by court order because it facilitates the illegal downloading of copyrighted motion pictures. The illegal downloading of motion pictures robs thousands of honest, hard-working people of their livelihood, and stifles creativity. Illegally downloading movies from sites such as these without proper authorization violates the law, is theft, and is not anonymous. Stealing movies leaves a trail. The only way not to get caught is to stop."
What's interesting, though, is that the page is highly unprofessional. The page header reads "MPAA NOTICE", and the page itself contains a somewhat satirical 'I' rating - to represent downloading being 'Illegal' for everyone. The image is also rather ridiculous, with bold text saying: "You can click But you can't hide" - unusual, and stupid.
Personally I believe this is a complete mockup. The Nikush.com Team, including myself, and many others across the BitTorrent community knew right from the start that this was a hopeless battle. All credit to them for trying...oh wait, did they even try? What happened to the $30,000 they got for the 'first' month? There were no updates on the courtcase whatsoever. It seems as if Lowkee (alias of the Lokitorrent administrator) and sold the entire BitTorrent community out, and done a runner with many peoples' hard earning money.
Bye bye donated money :P
Good call...i just got there...read the notice and shat myself.
in a way Im glad i didnt donate although a couple of friends did.....lets see what comes of it. :shifty:
how comes my post got locked?
I posted before this guy didnt I?
ah well.
there goes my 10 quid
According to oddcrap from the Neowin.net Forums, after having spoken to Lowkee himself, the site has been taken down by a request from the judge at the trial. The images being hosted on the Lokitorrent server add to the fact that the site hasn't actually been taken over by the MPAA. So basically, they are still bullshitting us, but maybe not as we thought. Or maybe...
wtf?? BT is dyin....lowki torrent got shut down....holyshat....
BT IS DYING!!
FUK
BT IS DYING!!
FUK
BT IS DYING!!
FUK.....
NO...NO.....NO......NO
I DONATED $30.00 BUCKS....FOR NUTHIN
Lowkee is probably sitting home with his money reading this thread and laughing at the donaters...HAHAHA.
FUKIN *****!Quote:
Originally Posted by Skydragon
ya man u r right..
I WANT MY MONEY BACK!!!! WHAT A SCAM.
He made a ton a money and managed to sell his domain for a lot of money. It appears he sold out to the community.
Good thing torrentspy is still going strong. It's still the most popular torrent community right now.
Check the CSS and HTML - it's been done in Dreamweaver.
It won't last long man......Believe me when torrentspy got shut down.....BT DAYS WILL BE OVER!Quote:
Originally Posted by Xanthus
sameer0807 please stop crying, there are enough other private bittorrent websites.
MPAA MEMBER STUDIOS FILE SECOND ROUND OF LAWSUITS AGAINST MAJOR P2P SERVER OPERATORS THAT FACILITATE GLOBAL MOVIE PIRACY
Austria joins list of countries aggressively pursuing criminal actions against illegal file-trading servers; LokiTorrent server settles litigation
Washington, DC; Encino – In the second major offensive against operators who use BitTorrent and eDonkey servers to facilitate the rampant theft of filmed entertainment, the Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. (MPAA) today announced that its member companies have initiated another series of lawsuits and proceedings aimed at disabling those illegal servers. The MPAA member companies have also taken legal action against commercial websites that are profiting from the infringement of the studios’ copyrighted motion pictures.
“With our first round of lawsuits and legal actions against these individuals who facilitate the theft of movies online, often for their own personal gain, we were able to seriously hamper the traffic on these sites or completely shut them down,” said John G. Malcolm, Senior Vice President and Director, Worldwide Anti-Piracy Operations, MPAA. “That was one step—and a successful one—against these individuals, and today’s announcement should demonstrate that we plan to be equally vigilant against anyone caught operating one of these websites. And as these actions prove, we will catch them.”
In addition the MPAA announced that law enforcement authorities in Austria joined Hong Kong, Finland, France and the Netherlands as countries that have taken criminal action against operators of such servers in their own countries.
The MPAA's efforts to date have resulted in a 40 percent reduction in the number of servers that continue to operate. One such site that will no longer exist is LokiTorrent—one of the largest BitTorrent host servers. The operator of that site, Edward Webber, agreed to not only pay a substantial settlement with even greater financial penalties for any further such actions, but by Court Order must provide the MPAA with access to and copies of all logs and server data related to his illegal BitTorrent activities, which will provide a roadmap to others who have used LokiTorrent to engage in illegal activities.
BitTorrent and eDonkey are examples of newer kinds of peer-to-peer file-trading networks that have proliferated recently, which rely on servers (termed BitTorrent "trackers" and eDonkey "servers") to index and efficiently deliver files of all kinds. The operators being targeted by these actions have misused this technology by knowingly assisting online pirates to disseminate hundreds of millions of illegal copies of movies and television programs.
“The MPAA and its member companies believe that these actions will not only stem the theft of our intellectual property, but will allow these new technologies to be used for the proper, legal and constructive purposes they were created for, without being subverted into a haven for criminal activity,” said Malcolm.
The MPAA also announced today that it will be sending takedown notices pursuant to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to Internet service providers that host eDonkey servers that are being used to facilitate copyright infringement. They also filed suits against four pirate websites. The operators of these sites charge their customers subscription fees in exchange for substantial assistance in locating and downloading infringing copies of copyrighted motion pictures, including films owned by the MPAAA member companies. The four sites are: www.brandnewmovies.com; www.moviepros.net; www.downloadmuch.com; www.downloaditall.com.
These actions are only the latest step in the MPAA’s multi-pronged fight against online piracy. Other initiatives have included educational outreach to parents, consumers, university administrators and students as well as high school and elementary school children; anti-piracy legislation to toughen penalties; support of criminal law enforcement initiatives against egregious online and hard goods motion picture pirates; litigation against individual online file traders; and development of new technologies to detect and prevent piracy. The MPAA’s member studios have also been strong supporters of, and investors in, legal movie download services and technologies such as MovieLink, CinemaNow and MovieBeam which provide a safe, attractive and economical alternative to piracy.
About Piracy in the Film Industry
It is estimated that the film industry lost approximately $3.5 billion to movie piracy in 2004, a total that does not include losses due to illegal file sharing online. According to a Smith Barney study, that number is expected to jump to $5.4 billion in 2005. By deeply cutting into revenues, movie piracy limits the choices for consumers at the box office. Sixty percent of all movies never recoup their production and marketing costs which average well over $100 million. Piracy also hurts the hundreds of thousands of individuals whose jobs depend on a vital movie industry, including sound and lighting technicians, carpenters, and theatre and video store employees.
About the MPAA
The Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. (MPAA) serves as the voice and advocate of the American motion picture, home video and television industries from its offices in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. Its members include Buena Vista Pictures Distribution, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc., Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc., Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation, Universal City Studios LLLP, and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.
# # #
For more information, please contact:
Phuong Yokitis
MPAA Washington, DC
202-293-1966
Anne Caliguiri
MPAA Encino
818-995-6600
lol....ur right mate!Quote:
Originally Posted by {I}{K}{E}
i have the same feeling man, eveything just seems so fucked up at the moment and it doesent seem to be settling down.Quote:
Originally Posted by sameer0807
it just ugly
Public sites are definately more at risk than private sites. But these things have a habit of popping up all the time. Its just a case of keep your eye on the ball.
LokiTorrent fed the torrent hunger of 680,000 active registered members and dealt with 1.8 million hits per day. They were the only website to stand and fight the MPAA after the pre-Christmas shutdowns. Or so the community, who donated $40,000 legal aid, thought.
Either $40, 000 is not enough to fight, or the MPAA have given Edward Webber, the site owner, a better offer.
“This website has been permanently shut down by court order because it facilitates the illegal downloading of copyrighted motion pictures,” an MPAA notice on Lokitorrent.com now reads.
Torrentstop, LokiTorrent's lighter sister which is also run by Webber, displays the same notice.
Sources close to Webber have confirmed that the shutdown by the MPAA is permanent. The case will not go to trail. No more information is available at this stage due to a court gagging order.
Update: LokiTorrent administrator Edward Webber has agreed to pay a substantial fine and to provide all BitTorrent activity logs of its former users. This comes as a serious betrayal to those who felt that LokiTorrent intended to fight the MPAA lawsuit. From the MPAA press release:
The MPAA's efforts to date have resulted in a 40 percent reduction in the number of servers that continue to operate. One such site that will no longer exist is LokiTorrent—one of the largest BitTorrent host servers. The operator of that site, Edward Webber, agreed to not only pay a substantial settlement with even greater financial penalties for any further such actions, but by Court Order must provide the MPAA with access to and copies of all logs and server data related to his illegal BitTorrent activities, which will provide a roadmap to others who have used LokiTorrent to engage in illegal activities.
Hollywood has a record of avoiding the difficulties of proving their victims guilty. As a substitute, they intimidate both P2P users and leaders by making offers which can not be refused.
Webber’s intention to stand and fight have been under scrutiny since the website was found for sale on US Netco SEDO, complete with the details of 680, 000 active members. Webber claimed to be testing the water, saying he did not mean to cause a stir.
The loss is another blow to BitTorrent, and file sharing as a whole, which has lost many of the main P2P websites over the last few months. Nonetheless, it is a community which has survived the loss of SuprNova and Youceff, returning virtually unscathed on the other side.
Source: http://www.slyck.com/news.php?story=661
your avatar says it all, :PQuote:
Originally Posted by Expire
I dunno {I}{K}{E} is tellin me not cry, but after hearing more news on lawsuits by MPAA, I can't help myself!
http://www.vip-torrents.com/ is still up. :D
Demonoid is back! I think they are hosting from Russia now.
I kind of suspected something like this would happen. The site was a bit pants anyhow. There's plenty of much better private and public sites out there.
Update: LokiTorrent administrator Edward Webber has agreed to pay a substantial fine and to provide all BitTorrent activity logs of its former users. This comes as a serious betrayal to those who felt that LokiTorrent intended to fight the MPAA lawsuit. From the MPAA press release:
Not only did he come up on folks cash, he's also snitching on em.
That Fucker :angry: :mad3:
well, maybe someone on the street will cut his fookin throat, i hate a snitching rat fuck.
NOooooooooooooooo first supernova, then the 2nd best was lokitorrent and now it's gone....
shit, i'm out of old bittorrent places to go , so where did all the loki members shift to? i need to shift to the same site they're going.........
probally torrentspy!Quote:
Originally Posted by mikenmike0001
I have to wonder what kind of logs the site kept.
It wouldn't be very useful to know how much was download, but of what and by who. This could be bad for a lot of people.
http://www.mpaa.org/CurrentReleases/...okitorrent.doc
from mpaa press release :(Quote:
The MPAA's efforts to date have resulted in a 40 percent reduction in the number of servers that continue to operate. One such site that will no longer exist is LokiTorrent-one of the largest BitTorrent host servers. The operator of that site, Edward Webber, agreed to not only pay a substantial settlement with even greater financial penalties for any further such actions, but by Court Order must provide the MPAA with access to and copies of all logs and server data related to his illegal BitTorrent activities, which will provide a roadmap to others who have used LokiTorrent to engage in illegal activities.
http://img169.exs.cx/img169/657/commp38qm.jpg
I don't know that the MPAA and RIAA have any joint anti-piracy operations. I really am under the impression that although they might have a similar intrest in seeing the downfall of p2p, they aren't working together.
http://img197.exs.cx/img197/8253/low...cocksucker.jpg
if anyones looking for him
'Tracker' Site Loses Piracy Judgment
The major Hollywood studios have drawn their first blood in court against a popular new type of online piracy, obtaining a $1-million judgment against a website that steered people to downloadable copies of bootlegged movies.
Edward Webber, operator of LokiTorrent.com, agreed not only to pay the damages to studios and shut down his site, but also to give the Motion Picture Assn. of America voluminous records his site has collected over the last two years.
These records could lead investigators to tens of thousands of people who distributed and downloaded unauthorized copies of digital goods, said John G. Malcolm, head of the MPAA's anti-piracy efforts.
Malcolm said the site had more than 750,000 registered users and helped distribute more than 35,000 movies, songs and other items.
"It will have a lot of records as to who these people are and what they provided, and that information will be of great interest to our members," Malcolm said. He said the MPAA would turn over information to prosecutors "in appropriate cases," but did not elaborate.
Webber did not respond to a request for comment. His website describes him as a 28-year-old computer-network consultant in New England whose main hobby is building websites. He agreed to the judgment to settle the lawsuit the MPAA brought against him, but there was no indication Thursday that he could afford to pay the $1 million in damages.
The judgment, which a federal judge in Dallas signed Thursday, came less than three months after the MPAA launched an international crackdown on "tracker" sites for people using the BitTorrent file-sharing software. The effort in December also targeted people offering bootlegged Hollywood movies on powerful computer servers connected to eDonkey, the most widely used file-sharing network.
Also Thursday, the MPAA announced that it had filed a second wave of lawsuits against BitTorrent tracker sites in the United States and more lawsuits against individual file sharers. The organization also said it filed more notices asking Internet providers to shut down eDonkey servers on their networks and lawsuits against four websites that sold file-sharing programs. The MPAA also prompted authorities in Austria to raid operators of BitTorrent trackers and eDonkey servers. Malcolm declined to say how many individuals or sites were reached by the crackdown.
BitTorrent has skyrocketed in popularity over the last year because it can deliver large files faster than other file-sharing technologies. But the software has no built-in method for finding files; instead, users rely on people who run tracker websites such as LokiTorrent that act as directories.
These tracker sites compile links to digital files that are being shared online as "torrents," the format used by the BitTorrent software. The links connect users to the Internet addresses of the people supplying copies of the file.
Charles S. Baker, Webber's attorney, said at least parts of LokiTorrent were defensible in court. In particular, he said, Webber offered to drop links to any pirated goods that copyright owners found on the site.
But the studios had plenty of money for legal fees, and "there was nobody coming to the table willing to write a check for him to defend this lawsuit," Baker said. "Like a lot of David vs. Goliath situations, he's got stones to throw, but he didn't have any money to go get a slingshot."
Source (filesoup.com)
dammit not a good news. I haven't downloaded much from loki (probally 6-7 GB). But people who have used loki to download tons of GB stuff might get sued by MPAA.
I don't know, atleast that's what i think. People who have downloaded more (GB), are the ones who have high chances of getting sued!
The logs cant prove nothing
Quote:
Originally Posted by darkmatter
why not? Doesn't logs will have ip address and other user information?
Yes but you can name your homemovies "lord of the rings: extended edition" and then up them. It aint illegal to download something with a filename from a copyrighted movie if the file actually is something else.Quote:
Originally Posted by sameer0807
Unless they can prove that you were really downloading the movie the logs dont prove anything.
I hate that guy...Quote:
Originally Posted by darkmatter
Cock sucker selling his tracker logs :angry:
Why do you hate him?Quote:
Originally Posted by sameer0807
Are you the one fighting a big organisation and risking financial ruin and the threat of going to prison to be someone's "bitch"?
Don't think so matey!
On a plus side, I hardly ever used their site so won't miss it, elite has got to be one of the best sites now, use them. :D
Quote:
Originally Posted by dodgy368
Yeah Elitetorrents.org kicks ass :D