Dubbed "Operation Fastlink," the sweep consisted of 120 searches in 27 states and 10 countries. Officials seized 200 computers, 30 of which were alleged to have been used as storage and distribution servers, containing thousands of copyrighted works, including newly released movies and music.
The Justice Department estimated that the seized copyright material was worth $50m (£28.2m).
"In the past 24 hours, working closely with our foreign law enforcement counterparts, we have moved aggressively to strike at the very core of the international online piracy world," US Attorney General John Ashcroft said in a statement.
The operation specifically targeted "warez" groups, which allegedly disseminate pirated copies of computer software, games, movies and music on the Internet. Members of such groups may distribute material to "select clientele" over secure servers, and those files eventually end up on an Internet Relay Chat network or a peer-to-peer file-sharing service, according to the Justice Department.
Operation Fastlink is the latest in an ongoing campaign by law enforcement agencies around to world to target suspected warez groups. In 2001, the Justice Department and foreign agencies conducted a two-day raid that seized computers from a group named "DrinkOrDie."
The Justice Department added that Fastlink targeted a number of suspected warez groups, including Fairlight, Kalisto, Echelon, Class and Project X. Investigations were conducted in the United States, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Israel, the Netherlands, Singapore, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
Industry trade groups such as the Recording Industry Association of America, the Motion Picture Association of America, the Business Software Alliance and the Entertainment Software Association were involved with the investigation. Separately, the RIAA has filed nearly 2,000 individual lawsuits against alleged file-swappers in hopes of scaring people away from using peer-to-peer software such as Kazaa.






Talkback
The "Cost to the industry"
The inflated pricing of commercial software means there will always be a black market. "Piracy" is only the market expressing the true value (from the consumer's POV) of video, audio and application software. To most people downloading that price seems to be whatever they pay in monthly bandwidth charges.
Great. $50 million. Now let's go after the spammers that cost us about $100 billion in lost productivity
I buy more cd's now than ever before, mainly due to winmx. I can download records and remixes (pirate) and try the whole thing and if I'm still playing it in a week or two, I will go and buy it! It saves me the trouble of buying an album only to get home and find out its rubbish. This way I only buy the music I like. I also feel that the price of albums now is just about right, provided you shop around. I can buy chart albums for under a tenner now, this price hasn't really increased for about 8-10 years now so is really becoming good value.
Games too are becoming good value (not console) I don't mind paying £20 for a new pc game if it's a good one.