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Hollywood studios sue Megaupload for copyright infringement

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Internet entrepreneur Kim Dotcom speaks during the Intelligence and Security select committee hearing at Parliament in Wellington, New Zealand in this Wednesday, July 3, 2013 file photo. (AP / New Zealand Herald, Mark Mitchell)

ALEXANDRIA, Va. - Hollywood studios are suing the defunct file-sharing website Megaupload and its founder, Kim Dotcom, claiming the website facilitated massive copyright infringement.

The lawsuit was filed Monday in federal court in Alexandria, seeking unspecified damages.

Megaupload and Dotcom already face criminal charges for copyright infringement, but Dotcom, a New Zealand resident, has been fighting extradition since his 2012 indictment.

Dotcom, who had his name changed from Kim Schmitz, has accused prosecutors of acquiescing to the Hollywood lobby and says he shouldn't be held liable when people use his site to traffic in pirated entertainment.

Prosecutors and the studios say Megaupload was designed in a way to promote and reward users who trafficked in pirated works.

At its height, Megaupload accounted for an estimated four per cent of all Internet traffic.