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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Technology
Bobbie Johnson, technology correspondent

BitTorrent hubs go silent

There has been a lot of coverage over the Motion Picture Association of America's decision to go to war with BitTorrent, but the question has been how they would deal with the filesharing network. CNet reports on a weakness in the system that the MPAA seems to be exploiting:

"BitTorrent "hubs" that publish lists of movies, TV shows and other free downloads suddenly went dark this weekend, in a major victory for Hollywood that highlights vulnerabilities in technology behind the world's busiest peer-to-peer network.

Last week, the Motion Picture Association of America launched a series of worldwide legal actions, aimed at people who ran the infrastructure for BitTorrent networks being used to distribute movies and other copyrighted materials without permission.

The MPAA's actions have put pressure on a short list of large Web sites that had served as hubs for the BitTorrent community and that had operated for months or even years. Many of those sites have now vanished almost overnight, including the SuprNova.org site that was by far the most popular gathering point for the community, serving more than a million people a day, according to one academic study.



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