Kim
Dotcom’s been thrown under a bus and it is the tip of the iceberg.
They will round us all up one day soon
---Kevin
Hester
I feel like hanging my head in shame on behalf of the citizens of this country.
--SMR
Kim
Dotcom on extradition, government spying and fighting for the freedom
of the internet
TNW,
26
November, 2014
It
has no doubt been a long few years for Kim Dotcom, the founder
of file-sharing service Megawho’s currently being chased by
the music
labels and movie studios, and battling extradition with US
authorities over copyright infringement claims around his now-defunct
Megaupload company.
Despite some
victories in the ongoing pursuit, Dotcom still finds himself
at the center of a case that claims he cost the entertainment
industry around $500 million. With his lawyers
recently jumping ship after Dotcom ran out of money, the
extradition case has been pushed back to June as he strives to build
a new defence team, though he has a bail hearing coming up on
Thursday that will determine whether he will have to go to jail
pending the outcome of the main hearing later this year.
Speaking
via video-link at the unBound
Digital conference in London yesterday from his home in New
Zealand, Dotcom was quick to remind those present that this may well
be his last ever ‘public’
appearance as a free man. And that really might not be an
exaggeration either.
Besides
his own struggles, Dotcom didn’t pull his punches when discussing
everything from the US government and surveillance, to encryption and
losing faith in the legal system.
Here’s
what he had to say.
Smooth
criminal
Permeating
Dotcom’s grievances throughout was a constant reference to his case
being treated as a criminal one, rather than as a civil matter.
Remember the
circus that erupted around Dotcom’s ‘capture’ from his
mansion in New Zealand, involving members of the ‘Elite Special
Tactics Group’ landing
by helicopter? It was certainly something you’d more likely
associate with the ensnaring of an international drug-trafficking
cartel, than a cloud-storage company facilitating the sharing of
files.
“I’m
an easy target because of my flamboyance – I live a big life, I
have a great lifestyle, so when you travel around with super yachts
and private jets and so on, that’s probably not the best way to
keep a low profile,” explains Dotcom, somewhat matter-of-factly.
“Of course, the websites (including Megaupload) were based in Hong
Kong, it was not a US-based company, and we had a significant amount
of traffic completely out with the control of the US government.”
Two
sides of the coin
There
are two sides to the overarching debate – one being that Dotcom and
his team merely provided the cloud-based tools to facilitate the
sharing of files, and what the users do with the technology is up to
them.
Dotcom
compared his case with many other high-profile ones – namely the
rise of video and the now famous Sony Betamax ruling. The crux? Movie
studios thought these new-fangled devices would kill the movie
industry with piracy. However, there are legitimate and illegitimate
uses for all technology. In the so-called Betamax
case, which saw Universal City Studios challenge Sony in 1983-84,
the US Supreme Court ruled that copying from TV onto video cassette
constituted fair use, and was thus permitted.
Dotcom
has also compared
digital services such as Megaupload to the postal service –
the latter can also be used for illegal purposes, but should that
mean we close the postal service down? It seems it was this way of
thinking that caught Dotcom off-guard.
“We
all thought this (precedent) would apply to us too, we are a dual-use
technology – yes, people can use Megaupload to upload a movie and
share it, but we have always taken it down,” he says. “We have a
100 percent takedown compliance, we gave Hollywood studios direct
access so they could remove things they thought were infringing on
their material. So for us, all of this is incredible that this is
even possible. It’s the same story we have with Iraq and weapons of
mass destruction – ‘either you’re with us or against us’.
“The
US government is using their power and abusing their power and lying
out of their teeth, the maliciousness of this case and how they’ve
constructed it, and indictments and the lies that are in there and
the messages that have taken out of context. It’s just so dirty
now. There are no ethics any more, I lost my faith in law and the
judicial system.”
Then
there’s the other side of the coin, those on the authorities’
side who clearly differentiate Megaupload from the likes of Dropbox
and other legitimate cloud-based service.
Steven
Fabrizio, the Motion Picture Association of America’s (MPAA) senior
executive vice president and global general counsel, said
in a statement earlier this year:
“Megaupload
wasn’t a cloud storage service at all, it was an unlawful hub for
mass distribution. To be clear, if a user uploaded his term paper to
store it, he got nothing – and, in fact, unless he was a paying
subscriber, Megaupload would delete the paper if it was not
downloaded frequently enough. But if that same user uploaded a stolen
full-length film that was repeatedly infringed, he was paid for his
efforts.
That’s
not a storage facility; that’s a business model designed to
encourage theft – and make its owners very rich in the process.
There’s nothing new or innovative about that. That’s just a
profiteer using existing technology to try to get rich off of someone
else’s hard work.”
As
you’d expect, Dotcom disagrees with this assertion, and even went
on to launch his follow-up service called Mega last year, which he
says now has 15 million registered users. He also says that the
ongoing legal matters have technically left him penniless, though
that is in large because he has transferred his new assets to his
family.
“As
of today, I don’t own a single share in Mega – the family trust
that controls the shares is now completely in the control of my wife
(now separated),
and my five children are all beneficiaries,” says Dotcom.
“Hollywood has tried to attack the new assets (from Mega) that were
generated after the raid – as you know, the US government has
seized everything that was created up until the raid, all monies, all
valuables were seized in all different jurisdictions. So I’m
officially broke just now.”
Hindsight
As
the saying goes, hindsight is a wonderful thing. So is there anything
that Dotcom might have done differently, to side-step the precarious
predicament he now finds himself in?
“Of
course I would’ve done things differently, you always learn from
things that happen in your life,” he says. “My biggest regret is
that I didn’t take the threat of the copyright lobby, and the MPAA,
serious enough. I thought that because of court decisions that we
have been monitoring with our competitors like RapidShare, and other
sites that did exactly what we did and winning, where YouTube was
winning against Viacom. Our sense was that we were protected by the
DMCA, and by the law that there are cases that have been ruled on are
in our favor. Never for a minute did I think that anyone would bring
criminal action against us.”
Internet
freedom
It’s
all too easy to side with someone who’s potentially facing up to 88
years in prison – “that’s what my indictment says” [- Kim
Dotcom] – when they’re not inherently an evil person. But just in
case the gathering today was in any doubt as to who’s in the right
and who’s in the wrong, Dotcom frequently guided the discussion
back to the hot topic of internet freedom.
“We
know from Edward Snowden and the NSA leaks that there is a massive
surveillance apparatus currently in place that is watching everything
we do in the digital world,” says Dotcom. “There is a copyright
lobby that is trying to work with governments to protect their
property in a very aggressive fashion – almost in a very extremist
fashion – where it’s all about shutting websites down and putting
people in jail for things that were being treated like parking
tickets ten years ago.
“On
the other side we have ISPs, broadband providers, the large telcos
that connect us with the internet, trying to establish a two-class
system where paying customers get faster, better quality internet
whereas everyone else is on the slow lane.”
Yes,
Dotcom says that internet freedom around the world is under attack,
which has gone some way towards “radicalizing” him. So much so,
he launched his own political movement called
the Internet Party in New Zealand, but it didn’t meet the
5 percent threshold required to have any real impact. “We’re
trying to take the Internet Party global and fight for internet
freedom and provide citizenry with a tool to fight back against our
rights being undermined,” says Dotcom.
Encryption
Meanwhile,
there’s one thing we should all be doing in the fight against
government snooping, according to Dotcom.
“Now
that we know that the governments are spying on us and trying to
restrict our freedoms and control us, we can create and use
technologies to prevent that – the best of course is encryption,”
he says. “Communicating encrypted, and surfing the Web encrypted.
When you upload files in Mega, they are fully encrypted – you don’t
even have to install anything, it just happens. That’s why people
like it. You’re seeing more and more of these technologies from all
kinds of different companies.”
The
next six months or so will be pivotal in the future of Kim Dotcom.
Will he go to jail in New Zealand? Will he be extradited and face
decades behind bars in the US? Will Mega remain and continue to grow
as a business? Only time will tell.
But
Dotcom did have some hypothetical words of wisdom when asked what
advice he’d mete out to his own kids (he has five), knowing what he
knows now:
“Don’t launch a cloud-storage service…become a
lawyer,” he said, perhaps only half-jokingly.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.