By David Becker, 26 August 2004 09:10
NEWS The US Department of Justice has announced it has launched a federal criminal probe of piracy on a peer-to-peer network.
Federal agents have searched five homes and one ISP in three states, seeking evidence of criminal copyright infringement, according to a Justice Department statement. The investigation - dubbed "Operation Digital Gridlock" - is targeting a specific file-swapping group called the Underground Network.
Attorney General John Ashcroft said in a statement: "The execution of today's warrants disrupted an extensive peer-to-peer network suspected of enabling users to traffic illegally in music, films, software and published works. The Department of Justice is committed to enforcing intellectual-property laws, and we will pursue those who steal copyrighted materials, even when they try to hide behind the false anonymity of peer-to-peer networks."
Although no charges have yet been filed, the action is a milestone in federal law enforcement's treatment of peer-to-peer technology. It could portend deeper scrutiny of casual online copyright infringement, expanding beyond the tightly organised groups typically targeted by investigators in the past.
David Becker writes for News.com


In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.
Log in or create your silicon.com account below