Why did he in fact sign an agreement barring him from competing in that sector?
I can't understand how somebody who wants such a perfect world consistently painted himself into a corner from which he couldn't.
It still sounds like he's just reacting to his current situation, rather than doing because of his ideals.
Dotcom ceased to be a director on 3rd September 2013 (http://www.business.govt.nz/companies/app/ui/pages/companies...) but I can't get a definite answer on shareholdings (https://www.business.govt.nz/companies/app/ui/pages/companie...) as they may be through layers of shell companies, and highly untraceable.
Sync encrypted filesystems to the cloud. EncFS has some known issues, but for a lot of my stuff, where it's "write once read many times" it still seems to be OK from an encryption point of view - though it inevitably leaks file size information. On the other hand, it does play very nicely with Dropbox/GoogleDrive/BTSync - although for the sufficiently paranoid you need to consider the risk of the Dropbox/GoogleDive/BTSync binary running on your device having access to the unencrypted local partition... Using rsync or some open source sync tool might mitigate that somewhat (but I suspect if you've got data which you suspect an attacker might subvert Google or Dropbox to get access to, you _really_ shouldn't be trying to work out how to protect that data on someone else's storage - buy your own hard drives and deal with multiple copies and geographically separate duplicates yourself)
(because remember, there is no "cloud" there is only "other people's computers")
I attempted to use them for a while but found the upload speeds of their (proprietary and closed) clients to be utterly useless for anything more than a trivial amount of data.
Everything I found pointed to it being a client issue (the client was simply not uploading 90% of the time and my PC was more than capable of performing the required encryption and hashing operations far faster than my network connection could accept the bits) so I opened a ticket and talked to their support for over 6 months (!!!) and in the end they decided to just refund my money.
If you have a trivial amount of data, go ahead and use the $7, 30GB plan but don't fall for their 1TB plan, there's no way you can get close to using it.
Dotcom: "In addition Hollywood has seized all the Megashares in the family trust that was setup for my children."
Mega: "Mega said that it has 13 percent of its shareholdings subject to two freezing orders. A 6 percent holding controlled by Dotcom's estranged wife was frozen in November 2014 by the New Zealand High Court on application by five Hollywood film studios."
How can this be called a "denial" I don't understand.
Secondly, Dotcom's main claim was the hostile takeover, his family shares were just a part of that. It could be true that they were frozen but un-true about the rest of his claims.
So yes, it's a denial of his full claims, but maybe (or maybe not) a confirmation of one part of his claims that you pulled out.
That said it's obviously a bunch of PR speak that means nothing. For example this line:
> "More than 75 percent of shareholders have supported recent equity issues, so there has not been any 'hostile takeover',
You could plot a hostile takeover in which the end, winning, result is that you own 75% of the shares, that is the takeover. So having shareholder support when the claim against you is "they took over the company by sneakily getting shareholder control" is irrelevant.
All in all, it's a denial, but not one with any evidence in either direction.
Huh! I had no idea Mega was publically shared. Why would you do that if your philosophy was supposed to be privacy, not money?
One way in which this could happen is if the entities holding those shares are bought (so an indirect hostile takeover).
As an example: one of my companies holds shares in another. If I sell the parent company the other shares - and their voting rights - will transfer as well to the new owner. This is because there is no 'change of control' trigger clause in the shareholder agreement of the daughter company, if there were then such a change of control could force the company in the middle to offer its shares to the sitting shareholders of the daughter company.
But even that can still go wrong: the sitting shareholders would have to be able to meet-or-exceed the value placed on the shares and if they can't the shares end up in the hands of others.