Kim Dotcom, Megaupload, and Google’s Ties to Piracy Profits [Chris Castle]
Chris Castle reveals what he sees as the connections between Kim Dotcom, Google and piracy profits that have gone unnoticed for years.
Kim Dotcom, Megaupload, and Google’s Ties to Piracy Profits
Op-ed by CHRIS CASTLE via Music Tech Policy
“If you get down on your knees and beg to be arrested, don’t be surprised if you are.”
That was what I told a TV news anchor in an interview I did in 2012 right after Kim Dot Com was arrested on his vast estate in New Zealand. Dot Com’s arrest started a long running extradition proceeding between the United States and New Zealand that Dot Com and his team of lawyers somehow managed to drag out until this year. That’s right—twelve years. That puts him right up there with Roman Polanski and Meng Wanzhou. So now Dot Com is subject to extradition back the US to face criminal charges, and yet nobody in New Zealand seems to be in a big hurry to arrest him and send him Stateside.
So let’s review.
The first time I connected the dots on Dot Com’s piracy site Megaupload was when film maker Ellen Seidler launched a site called Pop Up Pirates. Megaupload figured large in her site for a simple reason: When you tried to access a film stored on Megaupload, it launched a popup with an ad. At that time, many of those ads included a credit saying “Ads by Google.” Ellen gave me a short clip of her launching the Mega popup in real time with a close up of that ad. I played the clip on a panel with one of the Google charm offensive folks who I thought was going to vomit when he realized what I had just shown the audience. I thought I conclusively demonstrated that Google profited from piracy and paid pirates—being Kim Dot Com aka “Defendant.”
Shortly after, I started posting about this obvious connection, which is how Dot Com and his confederates were getting rich from their the-Hong Kong-based pirate site. And of course, I would find it hard to believe that anyone was operating a lucrative pirate site from Hong Kong without taking care of people if you know what I mean. So there’s that.
Fast forward a year and I was in front of the National Association of Attorneys General demonstrating Google’s many, many connections to crime, terrorists, and general issue bad guys.
Right about this time I got a call from a distinguished music industry executive who asked me whether I was seriously suggesting that a public company was involved in funding crime. I said that’s exactly what I was saying. If that were to happen today, nobody, and I mean nobody, would question that Google is the paymaster of the dark web.
Which leads me to the Dot Com indictment. It turns out that we are not the only ones who made the connection between Google and massive piracy.
Adbright and Google were Sequoia investments and PartyGaming was one of the big donors to Creative Commons (and the whole Lessig/Nesson poker lobbying extravaganza).
So who had an interest in keeping Kim Dot Com out of an American jail while he was negotiating a plea deal?
Stay tuned, boys and girls. The plot sickens.