While the RIAA has waged a full-on legal assault against individual file-sharers, the MPAA has instead chosen to go after individual web sites. In 2006, the motion picture industry trade group filed copyright infringement lawsuits against a number of BitTorrent sites, including TorrentSpy and isoHunt. TorrentSpy lost, thanks to its admins' willful destruction of evidence, but isoHunt is fighting back. A recent filing in the case opposes the MPAA's motion for summary judgment, arguing that isoHunt is just another search engine.
"There are hundreds of public torrent sites, some limited to a specific subject matter, others general aggregators like isoHunt, who like Google, try to cover as much of the Internet as possible," reads isoHunt's filing. "The essential functions performed at a torrent site are also performed at a comprehensive search site like Google or Yahoo!."
isoHunt then makes a series of comparisons to search engines, inviting the judge to visit Google himself to compare. The torrent site only gives users a "means to obtain content," again like Google, but not the content itself. All isoHunt does is collect data, index it, cache content, and add user-uploaded .torrent files to its database. Any actual copyright infringement occurs only on the part of the user once he or she launches a BitTorrent client.
The torrent site accuses the MPAA of playing fast and loose with the truth about the BitTorrent download process in order to build its case against. Instead of occupying a "central position or power of control," isoHunt and other torrent sites have "no meaningful existence other than through collective existence." Every function performed throughout the course of a BitTorrent download or upload is dispersed, and no single site has any "power of control."
