Will thepiratebay.com be forced to shut down?
Will thepiratebay.com be forced to shut down?
Well short sum, the 31 of May, the Swedish police stormed the place where all the servers for the lare torrensite piratebay.com were located in Sweden (it is now down at the moment), took all the information and arrested three persons. What could be more more alarming is the latest news (by the swedish television) that claims that it was initiated after pressure made by the the government of USA, (even though the swedish government at the moment deny it). Since it just happend recently the police are quiet due to the investigation reasons.
In Sweden it is interesting since it is the first case of this kind since our new harder law on copyright, the outcome's going to set "standard" to other similar cases in Sweden.
But what happens if they are convicted (it that the right word?, I hate that I don't know the english words for all these law-terms) , and that US can put pressure on other countries as well?
read updated news if you are interested at:
http://piratbyran-in-eng.blogspot.com/
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In Sweden it is interesting since it is the first case of this kind since our new harder law on copyright, the outcome's going to set "standard" to other similar cases in Sweden.
But what happens if they are convicted (it that the right word?, I hate that I don't know the english words for all these law-terms) , and that US can put pressure on other countries as well?
read updated news if you are interested at:
http://piratbyran-in-eng.blogspot.com/
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Well, although I'm not an attorney, I do play one on D-Addicts.
People keep forgetting that there are two types of laws in the world:
1. Laws within your own country
2. International laws
Copyrights are protected by International law. All countries signed on with the Berne Convention must live up to these copyright laws. PirateBay always believed that the Swedish governmenet would protect them seeing their local laws, from what I understand, condone the things they were doing. But once Sweden signed on with the Berne Convention (August 1, 1904), international copyright laws can be enforced in that country - despite the local laws there.
--- groink
People keep forgetting that there are two types of laws in the world:
1. Laws within your own country
2. International laws
Copyrights are protected by International law. All countries signed on with the Berne Convention must live up to these copyright laws. PirateBay always believed that the Swedish governmenet would protect them seeing their local laws, from what I understand, condone the things they were doing. But once Sweden signed on with the Berne Convention (August 1, 1904), international copyright laws can be enforced in that country - despite the local laws there.
--- groink
ADC (Asian DVD Club) is down because its servers were also confiscated during the PirateBay raid (they also use PRQ as their provider). It's getting to be a very interesting story in regards to the legality of the outcome of the raid and how it was carried out.
Anyone interested in an additional source for following the news in English, Slyck has articles regarding the raid itself and what's been happening since.
Anyone interested in an additional source for following the news in English, Slyck has articles regarding the raid itself and what's been happening since.
Source : http://www.slyck.com/news.php?story=1205
Yet to this day, no clear connection has been established between downloading a copyrighted work and a dollar lost
=/
Yet to this day, no clear connection has been established between downloading a copyrighted work and a dollar lost
=/
P2P is not piracy, it's marketing.
In fact, if your music or movie is NOT being downloaded, you should be WORRIED!
If you can't even give it away for free, how do you expect to sell it?
What's the p2p-war all about ? It's obviously not about right or wrong, it's about power.
The power to control what you read, watch, listen to and think.
The Pirate Bay Back Online
The Pirate Bay is once again online. True to its defiant nature, The Pirate Bay is again indexing many of the same .torrent files that made it wildly popular.
News of The Pirate Bay's resurrection comes as little surprise. The Pirate Bay spokesperson "brokep" promised Slyck.com the site would resolve under a different country's flag if an immediate resolution could not be reached in Sweden.
Good thing it's a ship, they can easily sail to another country
Looks like they're currently in the Netherlands, and are working on setting up in 4 (or more) different countries
The Pirate Bay is once again online. True to its defiant nature, The Pirate Bay is again indexing many of the same .torrent files that made it wildly popular.
News of The Pirate Bay's resurrection comes as little surprise. The Pirate Bay spokesperson "brokep" promised Slyck.com the site would resolve under a different country's flag if an immediate resolution could not be reached in Sweden.
Good thing it's a ship, they can easily sail to another country
Looks like they're currently in the Netherlands, and are working on setting up in 4 (or more) different countries
In http://www.dn.se they say The Pirate Bay changed their name to The Police Bay.
Last edited by afroken on Jun 3rd, '06, 14:27, edited 1 time in total.
Well, there's newspaper journalists for you. They read the browser title and assume the site changed its name...afroken wrote:In http://www.dn.se they say The Pirate Bay changed their name to The Police Bay. XDD
[img]http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b100/ ... atebay.gif[/img]
let's just hope capt jack sparrow can pull through this.
let's just hope capt jack sparrow can pull through this.
At the moment, a Piratebay search yields the reply:
"No hits due to politics. The search function will be restored later today."
God bless them. I sent them some bucks. A little less than I gave to D-Addicts last time. They sell kickass T-Shirts too.
Note that I consider it wrong to watch anything that comes under MPAA jurisdiction whether you pay for it or not. I support The Bay because they make international content available to the entire world. The ability to download European, Asian, and African movies and music that would otherwise be entirely unavailable is what I love about The Bay.
"No hits due to politics. The search function will be restored later today."
God bless them. I sent them some bucks. A little less than I gave to D-Addicts last time. They sell kickass T-Shirts too.
Note that I consider it wrong to watch anything that comes under MPAA jurisdiction whether you pay for it or not. I support The Bay because they make international content available to the entire world. The ability to download European, Asian, and African movies and music that would otherwise be entirely unavailable is what I love about The Bay.
In fact, they don't have to. Hosting and tracking .torrent files is perfectly legal in Sweden. So the police interrogation probably turned out similar to this:Lowest wrote:Good thing it's a ship, they can easily sail to another country
[img]http://img317.imageshack.us/img317/226/finger6yx.jpg[/img]
I think you're close to the truth.eye wrote:In fact, they don't have to. Hosting and tracking .torrent files is perfectly legal in Sweden. So the police interrogation probably turned out similar to this:Lowest wrote:Good thing it's a ship, they can easily sail to another country
[img]http://img317.imageshack.us/img317/226/finger6yx.jpg[/img]
One of the questioned told a newspaper that he was denied to have a public defender present because the charges against him were too insignificant. As a result he didn't tell them anything at all.
how about US?
Hi, I live in US. I do not know if download from d-addicts for Korean Drama consider legal? I burn it to DVD and just use it for my own collection. Is this OK? Thank you
i'd recommend the police to read the law before doing something like that.. or at least make sure that the law has changed to their benefit before doing a raid.
it's so frustrating to see them wasting tax money like that! i worked hard for that 30% of my wage! i feel sorry for the innocent firms that had their servers cut off as well.
it's so frustrating to see them wasting tax money like that! i worked hard for that 30% of my wage! i feel sorry for the innocent firms that had their servers cut off as well.
Re: how about US?
i think they wont bothercikaba2 wrote:Hi, I live in US. I do not know if download from d-addicts for Korean Drama consider legal? I burn it to DVD and just use it for my own collection. Is this OK? Thank you
From what I understand, the storage of torrent files is not illegal in Sweden. The copyright lobby in Sweden managed to convince the police that there was illegal content on TPB's servers e.g. mp3s, XviDs, etc... so they raided TPB's ISP and took all the servers. I highly doubt however that any such content will be found. Since the police also took away other servers at the ISP, unconnected to TPB, around 300 web business websites have gone down as well (including a pro-piracy political party website which has led to people calling the raid political censorship). There's been a rally in Stockholm protesting against the raid
[img]http://www.thrinduil.be/bildspel/web%20 ... C_0379.jpg[/img]
[img]http://www.thrinduil.be/bildspel/web%20 ... C_0369.jpg[/img]
Looks like the Swedish police are facing a major embarassment and a load of lawsuits for loss of earnings. Scratch one up for The Pirate Bay.
[img]http://www.thrinduil.be/bildspel/web%20 ... C_0379.jpg[/img]
[img]http://www.thrinduil.be/bildspel/web%20 ... C_0369.jpg[/img]
Looks like the Swedish police are facing a major embarassment and a load of lawsuits for loss of earnings. Scratch one up for The Pirate Bay.
I feel that it had something to do with someone paying off someone on this one. But i think sooner or later they are gonna shut down the site legal or not. I wish they'd understand that its an impossible battle. A quick search in google and you see 10 new torrent sites. You kill one and another will grow. Its a migrating phenomanon. Seriously their strategy is just dumb. It makes matters worse when they put secret spyware in music cds (sony) and i could only imagine the nightmare blu-ray and HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection) is gonna be. This crap is what causes the problem when they want to put a ball and chain on everyone. I feel its only a matter of time until they find a way to legally monitor our internet usage habits and hold every damn person accountable for something. Its getting a little scary if you ask me. I feel this pirate bay thing is a bigger deal than most. I hope there is nothing more to it than this. Or our freedom and privacy can really take a hit.
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from their blog:
amusing.Just some stats...
... here are some reasons why TPB is down sometimes - and how long it usually takes to fix:
Tiamo gets *very* drunk and then something crashes: 4 days
Anakata gets a really bad cold and noone is around: 7 days
The US and Swedish gov. forces the police to steal our servers: 3 days
.. yawn.
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LOL~Ruroshin wrote:from their blog:
amusing.Just some stats...
... here are some reasons why TPB is down sometimes - and how long it usually takes to fix:
Tiamo gets *very* drunk and then something crashes: 4 days
Anakata gets a really bad cold and noone is around: 7 days
The US and Swedish gov. forces the police to steal our servers: 3 days
.. yawn.
TBP will always find something to make a fool out of those who try to shut them down.Ruroshin wrote:from their blog:
amusing.Just some stats...
... here are some reasons why TPB is down sometimes - and how long it usually takes to fix:
Tiamo gets *very* drunk and then something crashes: 4 days
Anakata gets a really bad cold and noone is around: 7 days
The US and Swedish gov. forces the police to steal our servers: 3 days
.. yawn.
Just the same as their replies to e-mails they get to remove torrents.
Not really within the subject, but the Swedish radio sometimes is too funny.
Last week the Swedish Minister of Justice (not sure about the translation) visited a show and allowed the hosts to cut a curl from his hair, since he was going to the hairdresser anyway. (weird huh!) Well the program hosts decided to make an auction on the net where the money would go to a "save-the-children organization." (even more weirder
Well the raid against the pirate bay occurred and the minister of Justice has been accused to initiate the raid.
Today he was on air again when it was time to announce who the highest bidder was, when the auction finally was closed. Guess who was the highest bidder? The pirate bay of course. So the minister of justice ( who denied giving the order of raid and has a lot of humor) gave the pirate bay authority to do what ever they wanted with the curl, he promised they had free copyright. He signed a document proving it truly was his hair and gave it the spokesman from the pirate bay. The spokesman replied that they might increase their t-shirts net-shop, to try making some more money on selling his"famous" hair.
He He he
( You can listen to it again on "Lantz i P3" website for those who understand Swedish)
Last week the Swedish Minister of Justice (not sure about the translation) visited a show and allowed the hosts to cut a curl from his hair, since he was going to the hairdresser anyway. (weird huh!) Well the program hosts decided to make an auction on the net where the money would go to a "save-the-children organization." (even more weirder
Well the raid against the pirate bay occurred and the minister of Justice has been accused to initiate the raid.
Today he was on air again when it was time to announce who the highest bidder was, when the auction finally was closed. Guess who was the highest bidder? The pirate bay of course. So the minister of justice ( who denied giving the order of raid and has a lot of humor) gave the pirate bay authority to do what ever they wanted with the curl, he promised they had free copyright. He signed a document proving it truly was his hair and gave it the spokesman from the pirate bay. The spokesman replied that they might increase their t-shirts net-shop, to try making some more money on selling his"famous" hair.
He He he
( You can listen to it again on "Lantz i P3" website for those who understand Swedish)
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*Calls the MPAA*melonyhappy wrote:lol i forgot about this site.
*goes off to dl some torrents
Joking lols, seriously although, the MPAA should stop bothering torrent sites.
I remembered they already sued:;
- dead people (how can those download torrents)
- grandmothers without pc's (she didn't even know how to boot up pc, even that she never had internet or pc to start with).
Their excuse:
"I guess we made a little mistake".
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The backlash here in Sweden seems even biggen than i expected (lots of people here who don't file-share, but don't like foreign business interests meddling in Swedish internal affairs):
Sweden could scrap file-sharing ban
Sweden could scrap file-sharing ban
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Weird NewNova says it will be back soon now lol.Mythrel wrote:Thats what I used before I found Mininova thank god. Its become the new supernova and if it goes down I'm screwed lol. I never heard of newnova but ill have to check it out.
First time it happened since it came online months ago.
Anyway google has still the cache:
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:rZ ... =clnk&cd=1
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