Kim Dotcom allowed back online in New Zealand
AUCKLAND - Associated Press
In this Feb. 22, 2012 file photo, Kim Dotcom, the founder of the file-sharing website Megaupload, comments after he was granted bail and released in Auckland, New Zealand. AP photo
The founder of file-sharing website
Megaupload, Kim Dotcom, is being allowed back online.
Dotcom was previously denied
Internet access under bail conditions imposed by New Zealand authorities after his January arrest. He remains under house arrest.
U.S. prosecutors seeking to extradite Dotcom accuse him of racketeering by facilitating millions of illegal downloads of copyrighted material on his website.
New Zealand
Judge David Harvey on Monday said Dotcom's behavior since his arrest appears to have been "exemplary." The judge ruled Dotcom could access the Internet, go swimming once a day, travel twice a week to an Auckland studio to record music, and meet once a week with his co-accused Megaupload colleagues ahead of an August extradition hearing.