File sharing service
BitTorrent and
Hollywood's major movie studios have reached an agreement in a bid to stop movie
piracy using the peer-to-peer service.
BitTorrent founder Bram Cohen has agreed to stop providing links on his
website to copyrighted films, and hopes to be able to license movies and TV
programmes that could be downloaded for a fee.
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It is estimated that the various versions of BitTorrent have been downloaded
45 million times.
BitTorrent now accounts for 33 to 50 per cent of all internet traffic in Asia
partly because it increases the speed of file sharing 15 to 20 times over
conventional services.
Dan Glickman, chief executive of the
Motion Picture Association of
America (MPAA), said in a statement to Reuters: "We are glad that Bram Cohen
and his company are working with us to limit access to infringing files on the
BitTorrent.com website."
The move is being seen as something of an experiment and a thawing of the
relations between the two parties, but few expect it to lead to a substantial
reduction in illegal copying.
The agreement applies to content owned by the MPAA's seven members, and does
not extend to any other search engine capable of listing BitTorrent files.
It also relies on the manual process of MPAA members spotting links to
illegal copies of material which they own, and to report the breach to
BitTorrent.
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