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31 Jul 2021 10:33:56 UTC
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Kim Dotcom: Caught In the Web
The larger-than-life story of Kim Dotcom, the "most wanted man online", is extraordinary enough, but the battle between Dotcom and the US Government and entertainment industry, is one that goes to the heart of ownership, privacy and piracy in the digital age.

Writer & Director: Annie Goldson
Studio: Decoding Pictures Limited, Monsoon Pictures International, New Zealand Film Commission https://www.nzfilm.co.nz/
Initial release: 22 August 2017

Director Annie Goldson details the rise and fall of Kim Dotcom, founder of internet sharing / pirating website Megaupload who was earning millions and living a lavish lifestyle in New Zealand. But when legal and political pressure from the US started to weigh down, Dotcom found himself in a battle with the courts that would last years.

According to the U.S. Justice Department, MegaUpload’s file-sharing business cost copyright owners, including the Hollywood studios, some $500 million, with the site making at least $175M in profits during its run, largely from users illegally downloading movies, songs and TV shows. The 5-year-old case has become a major test of international copyright law, one of the fastest-evolving and most contentious legal issues of the digital age.

Dotcom – born Kim Schmitz and a permanent resident of New Zealand since 2010, where he lives with his family in palatial splendor surrounded by high-tech security – has been fighting extradition to the U.S. He faces prosecution on charges ranging from copyright infringement to embezzlement, conspiracy, fraud and money laundering. In late February, a New Zealand judge ruled that Dotcom could be extradited on the criminal charges. An earlier ruling dismissed the copyright infringement aspects of the case, a significant blow to the studios. Nevertheless, if convicted on the criminal charges, Dotcom and three associates also charged face hard time.

Dotcom, like hackers before him, has argued that what subscribers to his site do with the content is not his business and that he shouldn’t be held accountable. At its height in 2005, MegaUpload claimed 50 million daily users. In 2012 the Department of Justice shut down and seized control of the site and filed charges against Dotcom, who blamed “the copyright cartel in Hollywood trying to take control and monopolies of all human thought,” per news accounts.
In January 2012, 70 heavily armed and helmeted New Zealand police stormed Dotcom’s mansion, at the FBI’s behest, arresting the man and his three ‘coders’ or co-conspirators on a range of serious charges relating to alleged copyright infringement by MegaUpload. Now out on bail, Dotcom continues to make multiple waves, gathering around him an unexpected and contradictory group of bedfellows. Is he a bit-stream pirate or a folk hero? An underdog taking on the U.S. superpower or a thief? A wealthy businessman or a freedom-loving anarchist? Most likely all these things at once.

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There is no copyright infringement intended for the video and/or material used in this video. 'Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for 'fair use' for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use' LEGAL DISCLAIMER The content within these recordings are property of their respective Designers, Writers, Creators, Owners, Organizations, Companies and Producers.
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