Polish Police, Aided By The IFPI, Confiscate Pre-Release Servers

Polish police have shuttered a computer server that was used to illegally post music onto the internet before its official release date following raids at the Wroclaw Technical University. The police also visited the HPN administrator’s home and have, in total, confiscated six servers with 37 hard drives containing 12 terabytes of disk space. Two people have been arrested and they are helping the police with their enquiries.

Investigators at IFPI, the body that represents the recording industry worldwide, ZPAV, which represents the recording industry in Poland, and anti-piracy group FOTA gathered evidence and drew the secretive HPN server to the attention of the Economic Crime Division of the Wroclaw Police who have subsequently conducted the raids and begun to question suspects.

HPN was a ‘topsite’, a server with a high bandwidth internet connection that allows for the rapid transfer of data, used by so-called ‘release groups’ to post music on the internet before it is legally available to the public. It hosted more than 11,000 complete MP3 albums and promotional CDs on its server for users to download.

Topsites are hosted all over the world and operate under strict security using secured, authenticated file transfer protocol (FTP) communications. Release groups consist of individuals who are dedicated to obtaining music before it is legally available and posting it on the internet before anyone else has been able to. Members of these groups gain kudos from being the first to leak sensitive material.

The IFPI claims that pre-release piracy is damaging to the recorded music industry. An album typically achieves the bulk of its sales in the first few weeks of its release and the widespread availability of its tracks on the internet beforehand can dramatically undermine those sales.

Author: FutureMusic

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