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MiniNova Begins Torrent Removal Trial Uh oh.
As it currently stands, this current community is in mortal danger of repeating history. OinK has already been taken offline, while Demonoid has been chased halfway around the globe, losing a lot of its once mighty 3 million-peer population. TorrentSpy lost a monumental case to the MPAA, enduring a $110 million dollar judgment which never actually got to trial; instead the judge in the case granted the movie industry a resounding victory because the court found that TorrentSpy had destroyed evidence in the pretrial period. Now we're left with The Pirate Bay, MiniNova, and isoHunt - and all three are facing serious confrontations with the entertainment industry. The Pirate Bay has already lost its case in Sweden, and faces another potential showdown in Italy. isoHunt is preparing its case in Canada against the CRIA (Canadian Recording Industry Association), which is set to begin as early as this summer. MiniNova is also gearing up against its own copyright foe, the Dutch copyright trade group BREIN. The current BitTorrent community is in a state of flux, and perhaps mortally wounded. And community members may find that news from MiniNova this morning isn't particularly encouraging. Today, MiniNova has announced a partnership with a third party vendor to remove .torrent files that point to potentially infringing content. MiniNova, who is about to grapple with BREIN in court, told Slyck.com that this new .torrent removal process is unrelated to any current legal action. Instead, Neik van der Maas, the owner, founder and administrator of MiniNova, has informed Slyck that this operation will only function as a limited trial. "This is just a trial where we want to test whether content recognition is a practical way to identify infringing torrent files. The trial lasts 12 weeks," Neik told Slyck.com Furthermore, the scope of the trial is limited. Only a "couple" of works are to be focused on, which should lessen any fears that a copyright Gatling gun will be unleashed on MiniNova. For most, the process should be transparent – at least for now. The way the process works is like this: the third party downloads a .torrent, and examines whether it is copyrighted or not. It then informs MiniNova of the potentially infringing file, which then automatically removes the .torrent from their database.
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