Uptobox Goes Dark Following Police Raids on Two French Datacenters
It’s no secret that French file-hosting platform Uptobox has been in the crosshairs of rightsholders for some time.
Founded in 2011, Uptobox gained popularity by making it easy for users to upload, store, and share files with others. In April 2023 alone, Uptobox received 34 million visits, roughly a third of those from France.
News that Uptobox domains had been blocked by French ISPs emerged in May, but the service remained unfazed. Rather than panic, it offered unblocking advice instead.
Serious Technical Issues…
Roughly three hours ago, the official Uptobox account on ‘X’ tweeted that the service was experiencing issues.
“It appears that we have a technical problem, we are currently investigating, the network seems to be severely disrupted,†the platform reported.
Police Raids on Two Datacenters
According to l’Informé sources, around 20 police officers raided Scaleway and OpCore, two cloud service providers based in Vitry-sur-Seine, an area in the southeastern suburbs of Paris.
At the time of the report, police were still on the scene, reportedly carrying out a court-ordered “counterfeit seizure†operation targeting Uptobox, which presumably utilized servers at Scaleway and OpCore.
According to l’Informé, the raids were carried out on behalf of the world’s largest entertainment companies; Columbia, Paramount, StudioCanal, Warner Bros, Disney, Apple and Amazon. All are members of the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment, the world’s largest anti-piracy coalition.
No Uptobox domains are functional at the time of writing.
One Image Reportedly Sealed Uptobox’s Fate
A remarkable detail in l’Informé’s report suggests that an image posted to Twitter almost five years ago may have marked the beginning of the end for Uptobox. It was posted to the @Starouille account just before Christmas 2018 by an individual believed to be the chief technical officer of Uptobox.
‘Expert’ Opinions Should Be Ignored
Some ‘experts’ posting on social media are claiming that the l’Informé article is bogus. Unfortunately, they have to overcome two massive hurdles to remain credible.
Most importantly, the news was broken by journalist Marc Rees, so we can safely bet the house it’s authentic. Secondly, the official Uptobox account on ‘X’ has just provided important updates.
“Following the incident, we lost access to the servers containing the user files, they are no longer reachable, we have not yet had any documented confirmation of the seizure of our servers by anyone,†the first tweet reads.
“The database was not affected, and for security reasons, it was relocated off-web and the servers operating the site were erased in their entirety.â€
Uptobox reports that no user data is currently lost and if it can regain access to its servers, files and user accounts may be reconnected.
“In the meantime, your files remain anonymous on our servers and are unusable. As for Premium subscriptions, these are frozen and will be restored and credited with compensation as soon as we regain access to the file servers. We are not going to give up, our team is working hard to resolve this situation as quickly as possible.â€
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.