The high-stakes lawsuit between adult content producers and tech giant Meta over the alleged downloads of copyright-infringing videos is heating up. In a new filing, Strike 3 claims that a Meta employee allegedly deleted over 9 terabytes of torrented files. Meta notes that this claim, which originates from an unrelated case, is mischaracterized and irrelevant. Regardless of the outcome of these and other ongoing discovery disputes, both parties aim for a trial in 2028.

  • @jaybone@lemmy.zip
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    83 hours ago

    From the article, the 9tb are related to the other case, which is about book data.

    Meta’s response that this is personal use is actually a pretty good argument. This case mentions something like 157 downloads over the last seven years. That does sound like it could be random employees. Plausibly.

    But wouldn’t their IT infrastructure block random employees from running torrents on the network? If it was company directed, wouldn’t they use like a VPN from some regular common VPN provider so that this all looked like some random Joe downloading porn rather than Meta? It does mention they allegedly have some “secret” IPs on AWS, which is also funny to me.

    • @FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      72 hours ago

      But wouldn’t their IT infrastructure block random employees from running torrents on the network?

      Not if the employees in question control the IT infrastructure.

      • @village604@adultswim.fan
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        136 minutes ago

        Nah, for a company that size they’d get DMCA notices and legal would shut it down. That’s why my job finally blocked torrenting.

  • @SirSamuel@lemmy.world
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    245 hours ago

    At first I was like “9TB!? That’s like a billion bajillion. It’s like Dr Evil demanding $100 billion in 1969!”

    And then I realized I have over 9TB of liberated media on my NAS. I really need to adjust my concept of technology, not to mention the passage of time.

    I mean, 911 was only ten years ago, right? Right!?

    • FauxPseudo
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      114 hours ago

      As of 9-11 I had a gig and a half of liberated media collected from Usenet. I know because I was running out of space on my external hard drive (connected by the printer port) and the bios was limited to two gb.

      It’s amazing how far we have come in just, checks notes, 10 years.

      • @frongt@lemmy.zip
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        23 hours ago

        You had an external hard drive on a parallel port? I’ve never heard of such a thing. You sure it wasn’t scsi? Or maybe even centronics?

        • FauxPseudo
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          32 hours ago

          It was most definitely parallel port. It was one of those rare relics of history that hardly anyone ever owned. That laptop was not capable of scsi. The read time was horrible. The write time was worse.

  • @brsrklf@jlai.lu
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    837 hours ago

    I don’t think I really care who wins that one, but :

    Meta responded in October by filing a motion to dismiss, arguing the sporadic downloads were consistent with ordinary ‘personal use’ by employees and visitors on the corporate network.

    Oh, yeah, just your ordinary downloading porn on the corporate network of a tech giant megacorp, as you do.

    Either a lie or an admission of baffling incompetence.

  • EbbyA
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    -608 hours ago

    How 'bout a NSFW tag there buddy.