Yep, I used "hidemyass.com/proxy" to download Zippyshare from this place.
Anyways, it's confirmed that Zippyshare ditched three whole nations. I caught a rumor that they just didn't want to deal with certain laws out of lazyness and simply blocking whole countries - Spain too by the way. The ISPs are not at fault, it's a Zippyshare decision.
We are talking about whole countries (Germany/UK/Spain), especially developed Western countries that have a high demand for such services (I assume in Brazil or Argentina where many people don't have a PC or let alone the "need" to share files is very low compared to Europe) - of course you lose customers. Even ancient browsers like Internet Explorer does so since decades. Having 5 tabs open full of ads just by accessing Zippyshare - smells like virus infestation.
Locking out dozens of millions of customers from developed countries, having to rely on ad-revenue from pop-up ads that are killed off by browsers.. And whenever I read "Zippyshare", I didn't even click on it because I knew my 52 Mbyte download would take "4d 7h 23m" due to their ridiculously low speed. So I didn't even accessed ZS to even see the (blocked) pop-ups in the first place. Also remembered that my download stopped for no reason and I had to redo it completely after 2 or 3 hours of download speed limitations imposed by ZS. I never came back. I know they latest ZS downloads were kinda full-speed, but they lost me as customer over 1 decade ago, I paid lots for their competitors though which were jDownloader compatible. As said, pretty idiotic management over there and: Good riddance Zippyshare. You deserve to die.
Look at Patreon-funded Pixeldrain, having people max download speed but are "forced" to invest if the crowfunding does not work or being slowed to a crawl. And not 5 "You've won a BMW" pop-ups. There you can see where newcommers and dinosaurs clash - and which share hoster thrives and which dies...
EDITS: Added that Spain is another blocked country the same time UK and German got hit and also that the ISPs are confirmed not to be at fault (for once) Also, I had a factual mistake in my post.