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February 10, 2005

LokiTorrent has either been hacked by the MPAA, or crushed by it. After several weeks of fighting an MPAA lawsuit while other torrent directories meekly collapsed (including the once mighty Suprnova), it appears that Loki has fallen. Right now I don’t know whether the site’s contributed legal defense fund ran out, or if some escalated tactic on the MPAA’s side forced the moment. A court order is allegedly involved, but I haven’t found anything more than that. Loki’s brave struggle showed signs of buckling last month when the site domain was reportedly placed on the market. If you go to Lokitorrent.com, you see that the home page has been retitled “MPAA NOTICE” and issues the following hostile and gloating notice:

“YOU CAN CLICK BUT YOU CAN’T HIDE
There are websites that provide legal downloads. This is not one of them.

This website has been permanently shut down by court order because it facilitates the illegal downloading of copyrighted motion pictures. The illegal downloading of motion pictures robs thousands of honest, hard-working people of their livelihood, and stifles creativity. Illegally downloading movies from sites such as these without proper authorization violates the law, is theft, and is not anonymous. Stealing movies leaves a trail. The only way not to get caught is to stop.”



Originally posted by Brad Hill from The Peer-to-Peer Weblog, remediated by jkinberg on Feb 10, 2005 at 07:33 PM