Rapidshare 

RapidShare
Type Aktiengesellschaft
Founded 2006
Headquarters Cham, Switzerland
Key people Bobby Chang
(CEO) & (COO)
Slogan Easy Filehosting
Website rapidshare.com
rapidshare.de
Type of site One-click hosting
Registration optional
Available in English
Launched October 10, 2006
Current status active

RapidShare is a German owned one-click hosting pay- and free-service (with limitations) website that operates from Switzerland and is financed by the subscriptions of paying users. Rapidshare is one of the world’s largest file-hosting sites with millions of files stored on its servers. According to Alexa, Rapidshare.com is currently the 12th most visited website1

Contents

History

RapidShare has two different websites, but both sites claim to be entirely different organizations and entities. The original site is RapidShare.de, which uses the German top-level domain ".de", and the organization has its central office in Cham, Switzerland.2

On October 20, 2006, RapidShare announced that "Unfortunately all drives of RapidShare.de are full right now".3 A new website, RapidShare.com was set up in an attempt to transfer usage from RapidShare.de to RapidShare.com.citation needed When the new Rapidshare.com was launched, holders of "Premium" accounts at the time on RapidShare.de were able to use both the RapidShare.de and RapidShare.com, until their account expired. It is not possible, however, to use a RapidShare.com account on the German site.

Operation and services

The limit on Premium accounts is 80 GB per month (2.66 GB per day), with a limit 10GB in total for later use. 4

On uploading the user is supplied with a unique download URL which enables anyone, with whom the uploader shares it, to download the file. No user is allowed to search the server for content; all files have to be downloaded by following a given URL.

RapidShare stated on April 2008 that it had 240 gigabit/s of Internet connectivity and 4.5 petabytes of storage for users.5

Non-paying users are required to wait 30 to 134 seconds, depending on the filesize, before the download starts and their download-speed is limited from 25 KB/s up to 250 KB/s (depending on the server-load). In October 2008, Rapidshare extended the waiting time to 15 minutes between each download.

Registration and payment allow benefits such as unlimited download speed, download of several files simultaneously, queue skipping, the facility to interrupt and re-start downloads, up- and downloading bigger files up to 2 GBytes, allowing Free Users to download their files with Premium privileges ("TrafficShare") and to store up to 500 GB of data that can not expire. Every premium account is limited to a maximum of 2.66 GB download-traffic per day, but the user is allowed to "save" traffic up to a maximum of 10 GB and can then spend the saved traffic all at once.

There is now a rewards program that allow the user to trade "RapidPoints" for a selection of products depending on the amount of points the user has collected.

Software

Rapidshare offers two computer programs to simplify file managing:

Rapidshare Uploader

This software allows queuing of uploads. However, it cannot resume interrupted uploads. It is available for Windows 98/ME/NT/2000/XP and runs without installation.6

Rapidshare Manager

This software has many more features than the Uploader, especially queuing and resuming of up- and downloads, but is only available for Windows Vista.7

Issues

Some ISPs intentionally block sharing sites like RapidShare so as to avoid legal issues due to the propagation of pirated copyrighted material.citation needed

On 19th January 2007 the German collections agency GEMA claimed to have won a temporary injunction against both RapidShare.de and RapidShare.com. "The latter is said to have used copyright protected works of GEMA members in an unlawful fashion."8

Rapidshare started to check newly uploaded files against a database of files already reported as illegal. By comparing the files MD5-hash the site would now prevent illegal files from being reuploaded. While this would be sufficient under United States law, it was later established in court that under Swiss law it is not. That decision forced Rapidshare to check all the uploaded files before publishing them. 9

A month later, Rapidshare stated on their website that "we will not spy out the files that our clients faithfully upload onto RapidShare, not now nor in future. We are against upload control and guarantee you that your files are safe with us and will not be opened by anyone else than yourself, unless you distribute the download link." 10

CAPTCHA

RapidShare has used many CAPTCHAs—letters read from an image or script by the user and then inputted in an attempt to avoid automatic or "bot"-assisted downloads—during its history.

Earlier version included of four letters and numbers distorted by wave filter. Users had to recognize and type all characters.

In the first half of 2008, an updated version of this CAPTCHA was used. It consisted of up to seven warped alphanumeric characters (though usually still four), each with a dog or a cat printed over them. The user was instructed to type in the four characters with the cat on them.

On 22 June 2008, the site changed the CAPTCHA to consisting of a tri-dimensional grid, with symbols in bas-relief.11

After three failures to enter the CAPTCHA download access is blocked.

Today CAPTCHAs are no longer used.

See also

References

  1. ^ "RapidShare.com - Site Information from Alexa". Retrieved on 2008-08-15.
  2. ^ Central office in Cham, Switzerland: Reuters.com website. Retrieved on April 13, 2008.
  3. ^ "Archived front page of RapidShare.de on 25 October 2006 by Archive.org". 
  4. ^ "RapidShare.com - News". RapidShare (2008-07-07). Retrieved on 2008-08-05.
  5. ^ RapidShare: Retrieved on April 13, 2008.
  6. ^ http://rapidshare.com/rapiduploader.html
  7. ^ http://rapidshare.com/rsm.html
  8. ^ "Heise Online". Retrieved on 31 January 2007. 
  9. ^ http://webhosting-und-recht.de/urteile/Oberlandesgericht-Hamburg-20080702.html
  10. ^ http://rapidshare.com/news.html
  11. ^ New captcha system (death to cats and dogs)

External links