OiNK File-Sharing Community Shut-Down
Now, we can talk about it: OiNK, the invite-only, free file-sharing community was raided by the police, and the owner was taken into custody. OiNK (once available at oink.cd)was known on the street for distributing a lot of not-yet-released and pre-release versions of albums. But OiNK was supposed to be a secret. (Some facts and rumors about the OiNK takedown.)
It’s interesting that they shot for this below-the-radar service, while the big ones still exist (like The Pirate Bay or Mininova). Maybe OiNK was never penetrated by companies like MediaDefender, and therefore wasn’t controllable or compromisable. Or maybe because OiNK was so good at grabbing those pre-releases. The tough thing is that whomever was behind this action doesn’t have to ‘fess up as to why they targeted OiNK—just that OiNK aided in copyright violations. The other tough thing—for OiNK—is that while he wasn’t making money explicitly for the service, he *did* accept donations, and no matter how minor those funds may have been, they could probably be easily connected with his service to make it for-profit.
And already people are looking back at even tighter friend-to-peer networks (or other darknets) like Soulseek and WASTE. The bump in users to the big guys, again, like The Pirate Bay, will probably barely be noticeable. People don’t want to share their super-secret goodies with the whole world; they want to do it with friends. So files bouncing from WASTE mini-network to WASTE mini-network will be better at insulating the actual initial seeder from discovery.
Regardless, at the end of the day, OiNK was a service that violated copyright—even though as some users will claim, it wasn’t *all* copyrightable, there was some openly free stuff there. Whether it was the proper strategic move to make is another question.