Files were first exchanged on
removable media. Computers were able to access remote files using
filesystem mounting,
bulletin board systems (1978),
Usenet (1979), and
FTP servers (1970's).
Internet Relay Chat (1988) and
Hotline (1997) enabled users to communicate remotely through
chat and to exchange files. The
mp3 encoding, which was standardized in 1991 and substantially reduced the size of
audio files, grew to widespread use in the late 1990s. In 1998,
MP3.com and
Audiogalaxy were established, the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act was unanimously passed, and the first
mp3 player devices were launched. In June 1999,
Napster was released as an unstructured centralized peer-to-peer system, requiring a central server for indexing and peer discovery. It is generally credited as being the first peer-to-peer file sharing system. In December 1999, Napster was sued by several recording companies and lost in
A&M Records, Inc. v. Napster, Inc.. In the case of Napster, it has been ruled that an online service provider could not use the "transitory network transmission" safe harbor in the
DMCA if they had control of the network with a server.
Gnutella,
eDonkey2000, and
Freenet were released in 2000, as MP3.com and Napster were facing litigation.
Gnutella, released in March, was the first decentralized file-sharing network. In the Gnutella network, all connecting software was considered equal, and therefore the network had no
central point of failure. In July,
Freenet was released and became the first anonymity network. In September the
eDonkey2000 client and server software was released. In March 2001,
Kazaa was released. Its
FastTrack network was distributed, though, unlike Gnutella, it assigned more traffic to 'supernodes' to increase routing efficiency. The network was proprietary and encrypted, and the Kazaa team made substantial efforts to keep other clients such as
Morpheus off of the FastTrack network. In October 2001, the
MPAA and the
RIAA filed a lawsuit against the developers of Kazaa, Morpheus and
Grokster that would lead to the US Supreme Court's
MGM Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd. decision in 2005. Shortly after its loss in court, Napster was shut down to comply with a court order. This drove users to other P2P applications and file sharing continued its growth. The Audiogalaxy Satellite client grew in popularity, and the
LimeWire client and
BitTorrent protocol were released. Until its decline in 2004, Kazaa was the most popular file-sharing program despite bundled
malware and legal battles in the Netherlands, Australia, and the United States. In 2002, a Tokyo district court ruling shut down File Rogue, and the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) filed a lawsuit that effectively shut down Audiogalaxy. in 2006 From 2002 through 2003, a number of
BitTorrent services were established, including
Suprnova.org,
isoHunt,
TorrentSpy, and
The Pirate Bay. In September 2003, the
RIAA began filing lawsuits against users of P2P file sharing networks such as Kazaa. As a result of such lawsuits, many universities added file sharing regulations in their school administrative codes (though some students managed to circumvent them during after school hours). Also in 2003, the
MPAA started to take action against BitTorrent sites, leading to the shutdown of Torrentse and Sharelive in July 2003. With the shutdown of eDonkey in 2005, eMule became the dominant client of the eDonkey network. In 2006, police raids took down the
Razorback2 eDonkey server and temporarily took down
The Pirate Bay. "The File Sharing Act was launched by Chairman Towns in 2009, this act prohibited the use of applications that allowed individuals to share federal information amongst one another. On the other hand, only specific file sharing applications were made available to federal computers" (the United States.Congress.House). In 2009, the
Pirate Bay trial ended in a guilty verdict for the primary founders of the tracker. The decision was appealed, leading to a second guilty verdict in November 2010. In October 2010, Limewire was forced to shut down following a court order in
Arista Records LLC v. Lime Group LLC but the Gnutella network remains active through open source clients like
FrostWire and
gtk-gnutella. Furthermore, multi-protocol file-sharing software such as
MLDonkey and
Shareaza adapted to support all the major file-sharing protocols, so users no longer had to install and configure multiple file-sharing programs. On January 19, 2012, the
United States Department of Justice shut down the popular domain of
Megaupload (established 2005). The file sharing site has claimed to have over 50,000,000 people a day.
Kim Dotcom (formerly Kim Schmitz) was arrested with three associates in New Zealand on January 20, 2012, and is awaiting extradition. The case involving the downfall of the world's largest and most popular file sharing site was not well received, with hacker group
Anonymous bringing down several sites associated with the take-down. with
Fileserve following suit on January 23. In 2021 a
European Citizens' Initiative "Freedom to Share" started collecting signatures in order to get the
European Commission to discuss (and eventually make rules) on this subject, which is controversial.
Techniques used for video sharing From the early 2000s until the mid-2010s, online video streaming was usually based on the
Adobe Flash Player. After more and more vulnerabilities in Adobe's flash became known,
YouTube switched to HTML5 based video playback in January 2015. == Types ==