London police arrested three people over an unofficial clone of Disneyâs shuttered but once immensely popular website Club Penguin. The company closed Club Penguin and its follow-up, Club Penguin Island in 2017 and 2018, respectively, but clones have been popping up since. The penguin-based social media hangout spot for kids launched in 2005 and was extremely popular; at its peak, it had more than 200 million registered members.
Unofficial clones, like Club Penguin Online and Club Penguin Rewritten, increased in popularity and activity at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, BBC said, but Disney has continuously tried to shut them down. Club Penguin Online was forced offline in 2020, with one person arrested âon suspicion of possessing indecent images of children,â the BBC reported. Once that website was closed, players allegedly moved on to Club Penguin Rewritten.
During a BBC investigation, Club Penguin Online was found to have poor moderation, allowing âhomophobic, anti-Semitic and sexual messagesâ on the site. One Club Penguin Rewritten user told the BCC that Club Penguin Rewritten was similarly âunsafeâ due to a lack of moderation.
Three more were arrested in connection to Club Penguin Rewritten, on âon suspicion of distributing materials infringing copyright.â All three have been released pending investigation, London detective constable Daryl Fryatt told Polygon in an emailed statement.
âFollowing a complaint under copyright law, PIPCU have seized a gaming website as part of an ongoing investigation into the site,â Fryatt said.
The website has since been taken over by London policeâs intellectual crime unit as part of the ongoing âOperative Creativeâ campaign, which kicked off in 2013 and with the goal of combating alleged copyright infringement online. A message from London police is now displayed on the Club Penguin Rewritten website: âThis site has been taken over by Operation Creative, Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU).â
Polygon has reached out to Disney for comment.