The Motion Picture Association of America this week filed a motion
for a summary judgement against file-sharing service Hotfile in a U.S.
District Court in Florida, TorrentFreak reports. The MPAA,
which describes itself as ”the voice and advocate of the American motion
picture,” argued in its filing that Hotfile’s business model is
identical to that of Megaupload, a popular file-sharing site that was shuttered earlier this year. ”Hotfile
is responsible for billions of infringing downloads of copyrighted
works, including plaintiffs’ valuable motion picture and television
properties,” MPAA lawyers wrote in the filing. “As with other
adjudicated pirate services that came before it, from Napster and
Grokster to Isohunt and Limewire, Hotfile exists to profit from
copyright infringement.” The document continued, ”More than 90% of the
files downloaded from Hotfile are copyright infringing, and nearly every
Hotfile user is engaged in copyright infringement.” The MPAA hopes that
its motion will convince the court to have Hotfile shut down and forced
to pay damages to movie studios, thus avoiding the need for a lengthy
trial.
[Via TorrentFreak]
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