Gadgehit.com writes: "The massive amount of data that remains in limbo after Megaupload was shut down by the FBI in January is to be discussed on April 26th. More than 25 Petabytes of data was stored on Megaupload’s servers when the US raid took place on January 19, 2012. Since then, Megaupload’s hosting firm, Carpathia, has placed all the hardware, which includes around 1,000 servers, in storage until the legality issues have been ironed out."
Ira Rothken has kept Megaupload founder free for years. Can he do it again?
Following the news earlier this week that Kim Dotcom intends to relaunch Megaupload, the entrepreneur has just delivered a new surprise. Rather than a cold start, Megaupload 2.0 will hit the ground running by deploying the original Megaupload user database.
In a rewards program that lasted five years, Megaupload paid out more than $3m to users who uploaded content the site. One of those was paid more than $50,000, despite having more than 1,200 takedown notices filed against his account, the U.S. claims. Countering, lawyers for Kim Dotcom says its unfair those users' identities are being kept secret.
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Honestly, there's bound to be some users who uploaded a private file, and now have no access to that file at all. What if it was a backup for something they needed at work?