Megaupload’s Kim Dotcom mulls legal action over Leaseweb ‘data massacre’

Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom may be suing server hosting company Leaseweb over a “data massacre." The Dutch company says it deleted files from 630 servers due to lack of interest in them, but Dotcom has revealed letters proving otherwise.
  The revelation comes a week after Dotcom accused the US government and Leaseweb of
  deleting millions of personal files without warning, including
  “petabytes of pictures, backups, personal & business
  property.”
  Most of the permanently deleted data came from European users,
  with servers then re-provisioned to other customers – despite the
  fact that Megaupload had specifically requested that the hosting
  provider preserve the information.
  
“They deleted petabytes of data in the face of Megaupload’s
  data preservation notices. Our legal team asked them multiple
  times not to delete the data while the US court is deciding the
  pending cases including the rights of our users,”
  TorrentFreak quoted Dotcom as saying.
  
  But Leaseweb’s senior regulatory counsel, Alex de Joode, said his
  company deleted the data and re-provisioned the servers “after
  a year of nobody showing any interest” in them.
  
“We did inform Megaupload about our decision to re-provision
  the servers,” de Joode said in a June 19 statement, thus disputing Dotcom’s
  accusation that the decision was made "without warning.”
  De Joode said that Leaseweb received no answer from the
  Megaupload team, so they “commenced the re-provisioning of the
  servers in February 2013.”
“To minimize security risks and maximize the privacy of our
  clients, it is a standard procedure at Leaseweb to completely
  clean servers before they are offered to any new customer,”
  he said.
  
  To back up his accusations, Kim Dotcom has published an email
  which was sent from Megaupload’s legal counsel to Leaseweb in
  March 2012. The letter allegedly shows that Megaupload did, in
  fact, request preservation of the files.
  
"Megaupload continues to request that Leaseweb preserve any
  and all information, documentation and data related to Megaupload
  - as destruction by Leaseweb would appear to be in violation of
  amongst other things the applicable civil litigation data
  preservation rules and would interfere with evidence in a
  criminal matter [...]," said the letter. The email is signed by Megaupload lawyer Ira
  Rothken and addressed to Leaseweb’s A.H. Bram de Haas van
  Dorsser.
  
  The email adds that “the Mega data on the servers at Leaseweb
  contain private and sensitive customer data and is subject to
  applicable privacy and data retention laws.”
“Megaupload is negotiating with the United States to discern
  feasibility of consumer data access and the conditions for the
  same," Rothken wrote in the letter. 

  The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) representing the
  file-sharing website in court made a similar request to Leaseweb USA in April.
  
  “We now write to formally request that you preserve that material
  both for purposes of contemplated future litigation and as a
  matter of obligation and courtesy to the innocent individuals
  whose materials have unfortunately been swept up into this
  case,” the EFF letter reads.
  
  According to Dotcom, Megaupload’s legal team is analyzing whether
  Leaseweb violated the law.
  
“I can tell you that we are contemplating legal action against
  Leaseweb,” he told TorrentFreak on Wednesday.
  
“We believe that Leaseweb acted inappropriately under the
  circumstances when they destroyed data,” Rothken told the
  blogging website. “Ultimately we blame the United States who
  exercised constructive control over Megaupload’s assets and who
  had the obligation, resources, and ability to preserve all
  relevant and exonerating evidence including the data located at
  Leaseweb and failed to do so,” he added.
  
  But Leaseweb claims it done nothing wrong. In a June 26
  statement, the company stressed that “the contract between
  Leaseweb B.V. and Megaupload was governed by Dutch law.”
“This means the termination, and subsequent data retention
  needs to be valid under Dutch law. As there was no claim from the
  Dutch authorities on the data, the data was not subject to
  evidence rules. Also Dutch and European Privacy legislation
  prohibit giving third parties (i.e. MegaUpload customers, or
  Instra) direct access to their data,” the statement read.
  
  Dotcom, who made a fortune from his file-sharing service
  Megaupload, is currently under a federal investigation, launched
  by the US Department of Justice after police raided his home. He
  is currently free on bail in New Zealand, with an extradition
  trial set for August.
  
  The US has charged the Megaupload founder with facilitating
  copyright fraud on a massive scale, racketeering, and
  money-laundering, which carries maximum sentence of 20 years in
  jail.
  
  Authorities claim Megaupload has cost copyright holders upwards
  of $500 million in lost revenues, due to content being illegally
  uploaded to its servers. The Department of Justice also believes
  Dotcom illegally earned $175 million by selling ads and
  subscriptions on the site.
  
  On the anniversary of his arrest last January, Dotcom launched a
  new file-hosting site called ‘Mega.’
  













