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Pirate Bay founders say Bayfiles will respect copyright

Bayfiles
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Two of the founders of the notorious Pirate Bay BitTorrent file sharing site have launched a new file sharing service: Bayfiles. However, rather than being a one-to-everyone file sharing service like Pirate Bay, Bayfiles follows a model more similar to RapidShare or MegaUpload: a user uploads data, it doesn’t get put into a public pool that anyone can search and download. Instead, the user receives a private URL they can share with friends. Without the private link, there’s no way for other Bayfiles users to locate or download content on the service.

The idea is that Bayfiles will enable users to store and share music, video, and other data, and that Bayfiles will comply with legitimate requests to remove content being distributed via the service in violation of copyright law, and the services’ terms of service warns files that illegally shared files will be deleted. However, Bayfiles’ design may make it very difficult for rights-holders and others to determine whether files are being shared illegally: just as site visitors can’t search through Bayfiles content looking for things, rights holders and agencies can’t comb through material uploaded to Bayfiles looking for material that violates their copyrights. Instead, they will likely be forced to crawl through forum postings, message boards, IRC channels, wall posts, and other outlets looking for those “private” Bayfiles URLs that point to infringing content. And bringing action against Bayfiles may be tough: the company is based in Hong Kong.

Some rights owners’ concerns may be ameliorated by size limits on Bayfiles uploads: unregistered users are limited to 250 MB, while registered users are limited to 500 MB. Bayfiles limits downloads to one file per hour, and there’s a waiting period to download items.

Paid users can bypass these restrictions: users can pay Bayfiles €5 a month for unlimited use, with bulk deals available for €25 for six months or €45 for a year.

Bayfiles’ mode of operation may enable it to skirt liability under copyright law. If rights holders can prove that content on the service is being distributed illegally, Bayfiles might be off the hook if they take down that content promptly—and Bayfiles gets deniability by being able to claim they were unaware of the infringing content and, therefore, were not contributing to or facilitating infringement. However, the company may find itself in a position similar to YouTube, which was eventually forced to create tools to enable rights holders to audit and flag illegal content on the service (and eventually, even monetize it).

In April 2009, Pirate Bay’s founders were found guilty of having facilitating users to violate copyright.

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Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
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