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INTERNET SPACE
Decision due in Megaupload founder's N.Z. bail bid
by Staff Writers
Wellington (AFP) Jan 24, 2012


Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom is set to learn Wednesday if he will remain behind bars in New Zealand while US authorities seek his extradition on allegations of massive copyright theft.

The Internet tycoon has been in custody since police raided his Auckland mansion last Friday but vigorously denies any wrongdoing and has applied for bail as US moves to extradite him make their way through the courts.

Judge David McNaughton said on Monday that he would decide "at the very latest by Wednesday morning" whether Dotcom, also known as Kim Schmitz, must remain in custody.

Tuesday passed with no decision from the court.

The German businessman is among seven people indicted by the US Justice Department and FBI accused of "massive worldwide online piracy of numerous types of copyrighted works, through Megaupload.com" and other sites.

They allegedly generated more than $175 million in criminal proceeds and caused more than $500 million in harm to copyright owners by offering pirated copies of movies, TV programmes and other content.

Prosecutors opposed bail earlier this week, labelling Dotcom an "extreme" flight risk who had previously used his fortune to flee to Thailand when wanted on charges in Germany.

His lawyer, Paul Davison, argued that Dotcom had no intention of fleeing if granted bail as he wanted to stay in New Zealand with his pregnant wife and family.

Dotcom and three associates arrested with him in Auckland do not face charges in New Zealand and following the bail hearing, US authorities have 45 days to formally file extradition documents.

The other three people named in the US indictment remain at large.

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Google hit by new anti-trust complaint in Europe
Brussels (AFP) Jan 24, 2012 - The French online shopping website Twenga has filed a complaint against Google at the European Commission, accusing the Internet search giant of abusing its dominant position to eliminate any competition.

The commission, the European Union's competition watchdog, has been investigating Google since November 2010 following several complaints, with US IT giant Microsoft filing its own grievance last year.

Twenga, which allows users to search and compare prices of a wide-range of products, announced Tuesday that it had filed a complaint against Google the day before.

"The abusive practices of Google strengthened considerably in 2011 with a clear willingness to eliminate all forms of competition in several sectors such as video, hotel and product searches, and airfare searches, despite anti-trust probes in Europe and the United States," said Twenga co-founder Bastien Duclaux.

"In this context, Twenga has asked the European Commission to quickly make the US giant stop its anti-competitive actions, which undermine innovation and jobs in the European Union," he said.

The French company accuses Google of giving an edge to its own services, such as Google Shopping, in search results while systematically putting competing websites lower down.

The European Commission told AFP it would review Twenga's complaint and decide whether to include it to the ongoing investigation. Nine other complaints are already part of the probe.



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INTERNET SPACE
Megaupload founder denies piracy, demands release
Wellington (AFP) Jan 23, 2012
Megaupload's detained founder Monday denied wrongdoing after US authorities shut down his file-sharing website, as new details emerged of a rock-star life featuring "fast cars" and "hot girls". Appearing in a New Zealand court, Kim Dotcom demanded to be freed from police custody and denied doing anything illegal, rejecting US claims that he had overseen one of the Internet's biggest and most ... read more


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