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Torrentz.eu Domain Name Suspended

First time accepted submitter S37Rigor Mortis (1601271) writes "Torrentz.eu, the largest torrent search engine on the Internet, has had its domain name suspended following a request from the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit in the UK. The site continues to operate under two alternative domains, and is hoping to move the .eu domain to a new registrar." Update: 05/27 12:53 GMT by T : That was quick; the site is back, "after the owners pointed out that its suspension was illegal."

23 of 226 comments (clear)

  1. Now a redirect by Maquis196 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I got redirected to torrentz.ch and I can't tell if this is blocked by British ISPs like torrentz.eu was...

    So no service problems. Good job internet.

    1. Re:Now a redirect by Maquis196 · · Score: 4, Informative

      hate replying to myself, but after proxying through my home server (on BT infinity), torrentz.ch is certainly not blocked. Way to go UK!

  2. Criminal scum by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    These criminal scum need to be stopped. The City of London Police are abusing their power to enforce civil matters and shut down legitimate search engines. Apparently no-one is watching the watchers.

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    1. Re:Criminal scum by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Try googling "harry potter torrent" and see what links you get. It indexes content, legitimate or otherwise.

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    2. Re:Criminal scum by jones_supa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Try googling "harry potter torrent" and see what links you get. It indexes content, legitimate or otherwise.

      No, there is a big difference because Google's main intent is not to promote piracy.

    3. Re:Criminal scum by bl968 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I did a search and if you are looking for copyrighted materials you can find them. But you find a lot of other stuff as well. Linux distributions, freely distributable music. Public domain materials etc. this is a search engine.

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    4. Re:Criminal scum by 91degrees · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Me too:)

      I think a lot of Slashdot users can't cope with the fact that the law and software algorithms work differently.

    5. Re:Criminal scum by CurryCamel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wait, this search engine located at youtube.com - is that not primarly used for pirating music and videos? At least that is what I use it for, almost to 99%. And youtube.com is a service run by Google.

  3. Since when... by CaptainOfSpray · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...does City of London police have any jurisdiction outside City of London? Registrar should not have caved in.

    I should like to point out that I, a registered voter and taxpayer, have never been asked whether I want my taxes spent on something so monumentally stupid as a Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit. And I suspect that its creation was an idea planted, bought, and paid for by You-Know-Who.

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    1. Re:Since when... by Pieroxy · · Score: 4, Funny

      ...does City of London police have any jurisdiction outside City of London? Registrar should not have caved in.

      I should like to point out that I, a registered voter and taxpayer, have never been asked whether I want my taxes spent on something so monumentally stupid as a Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit. And I suspect that its creation was an idea planted, bought, and paid for by You-Know-Who.

      Voldemort? Already?

    2. Re:Since when... by Grantbridge · · Score: 4, Interesting

      City of London Police are a very strange entity, since the Corporation of London isn't really a democratic body, and their police force should be viewed as serving the interests of their corporate masters, rather than the people at large. As such, I wouldn't obey any instruction from them without a court order.

      http://www.theguardian.com/com...

    3. Re:Since when... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I should like to point out that I, a registered voter and taxpayer, have never been asked whether I want my taxes spent

      IO take it you don't really know much about the City of London, then. Since I now walk through it daily I thought I'd do a bit of reading. It is a very, very strange place (and the police are an arm of it). To refer to it as "well dodgy" is a massive understatement.

      So firstly, it's older than the England you know: the administrative system (known as the Corporation of London) predates the Normal conquest of 1066, though they had their charter re issued after since it was lost at some point. The Corporation of London is some weird hybrid between a local council, an ancient government, a company and a secret society.

      This means it's embedded in the legal system in weird and woderful ways. For example, they have a representative in the house of commons (not an MP) to make sure that parliament is acting in their interests. Also, the registered voters not only include humans, but businesses too and in proportion to the number of employees within the city. This means that bisuness vastly out vote the local residents. And for part of this you're only eligible to run for office if you've already been given the freedom of the city, making it a massively closed system.

      The dodgyness continues. The manifestation of this in the dody dealings of the City of London police is only the tiniest tip of a very large iceberg. About the best thing you can say about the City of London police is they sometimes wear those rather anachronistic Policeman's capes which look kinda cool.

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    4. Re:Since when... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Interesting

      their corporate masters

      In case anyone reading this believes this ios hyperbole or some left wing rant, it is literally true. The companies in the City get to vote in proportion to the number of employees and so vastly out vote the citizens.

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    5. Re:Since when... by mwvdlee · · Score: 4, Informative

      In case anyone reading this believes this ios hyperbole or some left wing rant, it is literally true. The companies in the City get to vote in proportion to the number of employees and so vastly out vote the citizens.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...
      civilian votes: 7.000
      corporate votes: 32.000
      Basically, corporations determine what the City of London Police's policies and priorities are.

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    6. Re:Since when... by coofercat · · Score: 5, Informative

      Going on... The City of London is often also called "the square mile" because it's a really very small part of the blob of the UK called "London". All of the London councils dwarf the City in both number of people resident and square miles covered. The rest of london has somewhere between 6 and 10 million residents.

      The City has a population of something like 7000 people, yet has something like >5,000,000 visitors every working day. To some extent, it makes sense not to let 7000 people define the local government policy for so may visitors (just about all of whom work for one of the areas employers).

      However, by the same token, those employers shouldn't be defining local government (or in this case, local police) policy. The City Police have asked for things like this before, and mostly been rebuffed, as seems reasonable, given who/what they represent.

      As the GP notes, We the People have never been asked if we'd like this sort of thing to go on - but then we actually don't pay for the City Police directly, as it is really paid for by the Corporation of London, who are paid for by the businesses within it. Hence we have this fscked up setup where there's a (small) police force for hire by whomever pays the most. That wouldn't be so bad if they just stayed in the square mile, but sadly they're starting to see their remit as "the Internet" as well. We the People could argue that the actions of the City Police brings the actions of the wider police force into disrepute though, I guess (not such a bad idea actually, now I think of it).

      The moral of the story is: If you receive an "official" communication from some police force or other, politely decline to do what they ask unless they can provide a court order. This will keep you out of trouble for longer than trying to be "helpful". Our judges might not be perfect, but for the most part they won't furnish the City Police with a court order for something as flimsy as this.

  4. It's Back ... by ellocotheinsane · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Torrentz.eu is back in full swing (1200 hours CET on May 27.) ...

  5. Re:Brits still think they own the world... by sa1lnr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Really, from what I've been able to read so far the City of London Police "made a request" and the registrar agreed to that request.

    Not saying this is right or wrong, just questioning the fascist bit.

  6. Re:Brits still think they own the world... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Fascists very seldom use violence, or even direct threat of violence. They create an environment where they don't need to.
    When you say "made a request", what exactly do you mean. "Made a request" means that it was implied that the registrar somehow would be held accountable or that they otherwise would be given a hard time if they didn't comply then it is perfectly fair to claim that the police has fascist tendencies.

    With the right intonation and in the right environment "It would be unfortunate if you didn't comply" or "I would be disappointed if you didn't comply" is far more threatening than "I will hit you if you don't comply"
     

  7. Re:Brits still think they own the world... by mwvdlee · · Score: 4, Informative

    As I understand it, the Police of London is a very small, mostly corporate controlled entity with much less impact than they purport to have.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...

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  8. Do we have a better file sharing solution? by Katatsumuri · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Granted, this whack-a-mole game with individual torrent sites makes for a fun show sometimes. But I find it embarrassing that the online community has to work around these issues time after time, and that some good people get caught up in legal battles.

    Are there any good alternatives to bittorrent for private, anonymous file search and exchange? I heard about several "darknet" projects, but they never seem to gain traction for some reason. Given a huge number of hobbyist hackers who support free exchange of information, I am surprised.

    Is there a fundamental reason why we cannot have free, anonymous file exchange? Or is everyone just happy with the status quo?

    1. Re:Do we have a better file sharing solution? by Katatsumuri · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because the software market would completely tank if large file sharing was legal.

      There is so much wrong with this post:

      1. File sharing in general is legal. Sharing certain specific files may be illegal in certain jurisdictions.

      2. The legal side of the problem is separate. In many spheres of life there is an area of untracked relations between people. Small cash transfers, personal presents, favors, discussions, meetings. I understand that the governments want to control, censor and tax all of this as much as possible, and at least ask for voluntary self-reporting in many cases. But I feel this "breath room" is important to keep the society sane, and we should have an equivalent in the digital world.

      3. The software market would not tank even if file sharing became easier. There are risks in downloading software from untrusted sources, and people who can afford it (or cannot afford the risk) normally buy it. Then there is also support, upgrades, special deals and so on. Media market has more to worry about, but also not as much as they claim.

  9. Re:Brits still think they own the world... by Raenex · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Really, from what I've been able to read so far the City of London Police "made a request" and the registrar agreed to that request.

    Not saying this is right or wrong, just questioning the fascist bit.

    Let's say you live in an apartment. What if they "made a request" to your landlord to lock you out of your own apartment, and the landlord dutifully complied. Perhaps you might feel differently if your stuff was taken in such a manner.

  10. Re:City of London Police paid by by Arker · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's a very old arrangement actually, dating back to the middle ages. 'The City of London' is not the city of London, it's a medieval corporation whose territory encompasses a small stretch of the most expensive property in London, and whose constituents are not the handful of people that live there, but the medieval guilds and the big corporations that own property there.

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