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View Full Version : Pirate Bay operators convicted Hollywood wins round one


Subzero
18-04-09, 08:10 PM
The entertainment industry has won round one in a legal battle against file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay, with guilty verdicts and one-year prison sentences handed down to four men accused of running and financing the popular site.

The defendants vowed to appeal, setting the stage for a lengthy copyright dispute between music and movie corporations and an online swap shop they say has deprived them of billions of dollars in lost revenue.

In its landmark ruling, the Stockholm district court convicted Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij and Carl Lundstrom of helping millions of users illegally download music, movies and computer games.

All four received one-year terms and were ordered to pay damages of 30 million kronor (US$3.6 million) to entertainment companies, including Warner Bros, Sony Music Entertainment, EMI and Columbia Pictures.

"We can't pay and we won't pay," Sunde said in a defiant video clip posted on the internet. Mockingly, he held up a hand-scribbled "I owe U" note to the camera. "This is as close as you will get to having money from us," Sunde said.

With an estimated 22 million users, The Pirate Bay has become the entertainment industry's enemy No. 1 after successful court actions against file-swapping sites such as Grokster and Kazaa.

Lundstrom helped finance the site while the three other defendants administered it.

Defense lawyers had argued the quartet should be acquitted because The Pirate Bay does not host any copyright-protected material. Instead, it provides a forum for its users to download content through so-called torrent files. The technology allows users to transfer parts of a large file from several different users, increasing download speeds.

The court found the defendants guilty of helping users commit copyright violations by providing a Web site with "sophisticated search functions, simple download and storage capabilities, and through the tracker linked to the Web site."

The case focused on dozens of works that the prosecutor said were downloaded illegally. They included songs by the Beatles, Robbie Williams and Coldplay, movies such as "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" and computer games including "World of Warcraft - Invasion."

Judge Tomas Norstrom told reporters that the site was "commercially driven," which the defendants have denied.

John Kennedy, the head of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, called the verdict good news for anyone "who is making a living or a business from creative activity and who needs to know their rights will be protected by law."

The Pirate Bay had assured users the trial would not affect the site, and it remained operational after the verdict. Authorities temporarily shut it down in May 2006 after seizing servers and computer equipment during raids in several locations in Sweden. But it soon reappeared, running on servers elsewhere.

Andre Rickardsson, a computer expert and former investigator for the Swedish security police, said the ruling could encourage the entertainment industry to threaten internet operators with lawsuits unless they block access to the site.

File-sharing would not go away, he added, but users would likely turn to more advanced technological tools to hide their activities.

"It's not as if people will turn around and say 'oops, I'll have to stop file-sharing now.' Instead the reaction will be 'oops, what can I do to protect myself from getting caught'."

Sunde's lawyer Peter Althin said he was confident that higher courts would dismiss the case against The Pirate Bay, which he described as a battle between the corporate world and "a generation of young people who want to take part of new technology."

The verdict comes as Europe debates stricter rules to crack down on those who share content illegally on the internet.

Last week French legislators rejected a plan to cut off the internet connections of people who illegally download music and films, but the government plans to resurrect the bill for another vote this month.

Opponents said the legislation would represent a “Big Brother” intrusion on civil liberties, while the European Parliament last month adopted a nonbinding resolution that defines internet access as an untouchable "fundamental freedom."

Earlier this month, Sweden introduced a new law that makes it easier to prosecute file-sharers because it requires Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to disclose the Internet Protocol-addresses of suspected violators to copyright owners.

The country of 9 million has one of Europe's highest rates of internet penetration, but has also gained a reputation as a hub for file-sharers.

Statistics from the Netnod Internet Exchange, an organisation measuring Internet traffic in Sweden, suggested that daily online activity dropped more than 40 percent after the law took effect on April 1.

Jad51
19-04-09, 08:46 AM
If you read this article they are prosecuting people for giving you the tools to illegally download copyright material. That is like prosecuting gun makers for making guns that are used to kill people. I have a major problem with Sony Pictures (And others)prosecuting people when Sony actively incourages people to use there equipment to copy copyrighted material.

Morph
19-04-09, 08:52 AM
The Pirate Bay will keep going stong. If the shit hits the fan they will just move the servers to a country like nz lol

NaTiVe
19-04-09, 10:24 AM
The Pirate Bay will keep going stong. If the shit hits the fan they will just move the servers to a country like nz lol

Well we have our own game/vent/web server. Why not a torrent server? Thanks M3Ds. I expect it up by midday today. lol

barber
19-04-09, 11:29 AM
I liked Pirate Bay it will be Mininova next. Before you know it they will have aXXo and we will have to start ripping our own movies:PDT_Armataz_01_19[1 lol

Morph
19-04-09, 12:08 PM
it will be fine lol

M3DIC
19-04-09, 02:10 PM
Why would we get prosecuted for sharing poems and song lyrics?

Yes agree with you Jad.... They were prosecuted for aiding users to infringe on copyrights, one comment that was said was 'Well in that case why dont you also prosecute Google as they direct you to where you can get the torrents....' I LOL'ed.

A different article says that the defendants were asking the judge if he felt threatened or pressured in making the decision etc..... quite funny.

Pronto
24-04-09, 01:23 PM
Judge's admission prompts call for retrial in Pirate Bay case

A defence lawyer in the Pirate Bay file-sharing case said Thursday he will demand a retrial after the judge admitted he was a member of copyright protection organisations.

http://www.3news.co.nz/News/Judges-admission-prompts-call-for-retrial-in-Pirate-Bay-case/tabid/412/articleID/100968/cat/73/Default.aspx

Morph
24-04-09, 04:31 PM
LAWL !