Kim
Dotcom To Launch 'Mega,' A Secure Follow-Up To Megaupload, On
Saturday
16
January, 2013
Kim
Dotcom has announced that he will launch "Mega," a secure,
encrypted file-sharing successor to his wildly popular
Megaupload.com, which was shut down last year by U.S. authorities who
charged him and several other Megaupload leaders with criminal
copyright infringement.
Kim
Dotcom has announced that he will be launch "Mega," a
secure, encrypted file-sharing site being billed as follow-up to his
wildly-popular Megaupload.com website, which was shut down last year
by United States authorities, who charged him and several other
Megaupload leaders with criminal copyright infringement. Dotcom's
personal website, Kim.com, has a clock ticking down to Saturday, the
launch date for Mega, which is promised to be a secure successor to
Megaupload.
Dotcom's
personal website, Kim.com, has a clock ticking down to Saturday, the
launch date for Mega, which is promised to be a secure successor to
Megaupload.
Kim.com
already has some information about the new service posted, including
how the encryption will provide added security to users:
"In
the past, securely storing and transferring confidential information
required the installation of dedicated software," the
description reads. "The new Mega encrypts and decrypts your data
transparently in your browser, on the fly. You hold the keys to what
you store in the cloud, not us."
The
information on Dotcom's site also breaks down one of the ways Mega
will make file-sharing easier than it was with Megaupload:
"Before,
you had to install the Mega Manager on every computer you used
Megaupload from," the site explains. "Now, high-speed
parallel batch uploading and downloading with resume capability are
integral parts of the Mega website."
The
catchphrase for the launch is "We Promise We Deliver -
Bigger.Better.Faster.Stronger.Safer," and it appears that Dotcom
is flying in the face of his critics and authorities in the United
States and New Zealand, where he is fighting a long battle against
extradition to the U.S.
That
extradition case remains tied up in a New Zealand court, which in
December pushed back hearings on the matter until August 2013 despite
the urging of American authorities that it be expedited so Dotcom can
face money laundering, racketeering and copyright infringement
charges as soon as possible, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.
Rather
than lay low until the extradition case is resolved, Dotcom will hold
a news conference at his $25 million New Zealand home on Saturday,
Eastern Standard Time (Sunday in New Zealand’s time zone.)
“It
is a little bit provocative,” Charles Alexander, a partner
specializing in intellectual property law at Minter Ellison in
Sydney, Australia, told Bloomberg Businessweek after the
announcement. “The U.S. may redouble their efforts to extradite
him.”
Dotcom
had told a New Zealand court that he would not bring back the
Megaupload site, according to Bloomberg Businessweek, but it appears
the 38-year-old -- who legally changed his name from Kim Schmitz to
Kim Dotcom -- is moving forward with Mega nonetheless.
He
may be emboldened by a series of setbacks in the case against him and
the Megaupload empire. First came the postponement of his extradition
case. Then last week an Ontario court denied a request by the U.S.
government for Megaupload to turn over mirrored copies of 32
Canada-based computer servers to American authorities, stating that
the request was too broad and its scope needed to be pared down if
the court is to grant a warrant to obtain the mirror images.
Bloomberg
Buinessweek wrote Wednesday that a screenshot of the new Mega site it
obtained shows that it appears that it will use an "encryption
generator, known as a 2048-bit RSA public/private key, that creates a
unique alpha-numeric code used to unlock a file or a message.
According to DigiCert Inc., the Lindon, Utah-based provider of
Internet Security Certificates, cracking a 2048-bit RSA SSL code
using a standard desktop computer would take 500,000 times longer
than the age of the universe, which is about 13 billion years old."
Megaupload.com
was once one of the most popular websites on Earth, as Bloomberg
Businessweek reports that at its height it accounted for 4 percent of
world Internet traffic.
One
year since illegal raid on Kim Dotcom
The
internet tycoon Kim Dotcom has taken to the streets of Auckland to
promote his new file-sharing site Mega, which he's promising will be
like nothing else the internet has seen.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.