Slashdot Mirror


Following up on Torrent Shutdowns

dantheman82 and others have submitted a number of links about the recent closure of torrent mega sites like suprnova and torrentbits. The Unofficial Suprnova Closure FAQ comments that some torrent site maintainers have been arrested and that Suprnova was closed over fear of similiar fate. DeHavilland notes that the finnish police raided an unnamed torrent site. There's a lot of scary things here, but to me what is most scary is that American copyright owners can mobilize foreign police to do their bidding.

23 of 1,166 comments (clear)

  1. Irony? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    please note that if you are viewing this faq at any other location than http://www.silentdragz.net/suprfaq then it is not authorised. please report it to this address, thank you.

    Isn't it slightly ironic a site, outlining the demise of a site to enable IP violations, is worried about someone stealing their IP?

    1. Re:Irony? by tomjen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How many times must it be said?
      It is not stealing it is copyrigth infrigment.

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
    2. Re:Irony? by lothar97 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Isn't it slightly ironic a site, outlining the demise of a site to enable IP violations, is worried about someone stealing their IP?

      No it's not. Getting the word out that the 'official' FAQ is located at one address, then it's made known that other versions located elsewhere could be modified, changed, etc. I imagine there's a lot of disinformation flying around about this topic right now, and they want to make sure everyone knows where the proper resource is located.

      --

    3. Re:Irony? by Tassach · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If you wish to make the point that "copyright infringement" is less worse than "stealing", use your time to say *why*.
      If I steal your CD, you no longer have it. I've deprived you of the use of your property.

      If I copy your CD without your permission, YOU STILL HAVE IT. You've been deprived of *nothing*, except the highly speculative "loss" a sale (which presumes that I would have paid your asking price in the first place, and that I won't buy a "legitimate" copy later)

      Checking a book out of the library and scanning the contents is fair use.

      Capturing a song or TV show off the air neither stealing nor copyright infringement, it's fair use.

      Giving away your fair-use copies CAN also be legal fair use as well in some circumstances; it can also be illegal copyright infringement in others. It is a legal grey area -- giving a copy to a relative is unquestionably OK. Giving a copy to 10 casual accquaintances is probably OK. Giving a copy to everyone in a class you are teaching might be OK. *SELLING* a copy is *NOT* OK.

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
  2. Did anyone NOT expect this? by mOoZik · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I mean, c'mon. They were ostentatiously peddling links to illegal stuff. It was only a matter of time until the MPAA got its act together to scare these sites into shutting down, with little more than a threat. The submission of these sites (pun unintended) is what's scary.

    1. Re:Did anyone NOT expect this? by Donoho · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yup, only a matter of time.

      But this has little to do with right and wrong and much more to do with balance of power. Those with money and infrastructure (MPAA is only an example) will do everything in their power to maintain control over profitable media. Are content producers being hurt by torrents? Marginally. I think a balance will be struck in the distant future where content providers and consumers interact directly, with publishers taking diminished (not eliminated) role. Half-Life 2 is an early example.

      Abuses will diminish when the proper channels are available.

  3. Not that scary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "There's a lot of scary things here, but to me what is most scary is that American copyright owners can mobilize foreign police to do their bidding."

    Well, I'm not sure how it's scary. If I'm the owner of some digital item that has a copyright on it and some other country where copyrights are valid has people breaking it I hope the police would do something about it.

    1. Re:Not that scary by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If I made a product that I put effort and thought into, and I could charge $100 for each, is it lawful if someone in another nation can steal my work and produce straight copies for $10 each, thereby bypassing the entire R&D costs, of which I'm stuck paying for myself as well as freeloaders? Other nations should not be havens for those who engage in the theft of other people's property. Would you argue against all extradition treaties as well?

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  4. Doing their bidding by nwbvt · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Thats what law enforcement agents exist for. To enforce the law. If in these cases the law was indeed broken (I don't personally know the details), then they were doing their job.

    What did you think they were paid to do, pull over and beat minorities?

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    1. Re:Doing their bidding by Martin+Blank · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There is the issue of civil vs. criminal law. Police should not, IMHO, be involved in enforcing civil law to any greater extent than ensuring compliance with court orders (sheriffs or marshals accompanying people seeking to get property returned, for example, if violence is a reasonable possibility).

      Until recently, copyright law in the US was a purely civil matter (I cannot speak for other nations). While I shed no tears for the sites that have shut down whether under actual or possible threat of litigation, I do object to using the police to enforce these kinds of things. They should be working on other things related to public safety, and even in the safe cities of Europe, I'm sure there are open cases, and even cold cases, that could be worked rather than sending them to do what the lawyers should be doing.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    2. Re:Doing their bidding by Spad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But the point is that in some of these cases, at least, no laws were being broken - not in the country of operation no, most likely in the US (although it's getting pretty tough not to break any laws there these days).

      The MPAA et al are getting foreign law enforcement agencies to arrest people will little or no evidence that they've actually committed a crime in the coutry that they're being arrested.

      That's like me ringing up the French police and demanding that they raid someone in France that I think might have some involvement in the unauthorised distribution of my "IP". I'd be laughed off the phone.

  5. Good. by ThousandStars · · Score: 4, Insightful
    but to me what is most scary is that American copyright owners can mobilize foreign police to do their bidding.

    To me, what is most scary is that people think they flaunt copyright laws on such a massive scale and get away with it.

    Furthermore, this is exactly what should be happening: the government attacks those who break the law, rather than those who create the tools. Bit torrent and p2p applications have legal, useful purposes; by seeking those who use them in illegal ways rather than banning them altogther is appropriate, rather than trying to ban them.

  6. copyright is not american only by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There's a lot of scary things here, but to me what is most scary is that American copyright owners can mobilize foreign police to do their bidding

    Generally, those "American copyright owners" are also the German copyright owners, and the French copyright owners, and the Japanese copyright owners, and the Russian copyright owners. About the only place they aren't the copyright owners is Gilligan's Island.

  7. Re:Listing substitute sites? Smart by daniil · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What makes you think MPAA didn't already know of the existence of these sites before this list was posted?

    --
    Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
  8. Re:I guess the issue is by nwbvt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You can criticize the law all you want, I'm not about to debate the pros and cons of IP law on /. (hey, my karma has to be worth something), but the fact is copying protected works is illegal. Thus it is the job of the cops to enforce that law.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  9. International Copyright Law by StormReaver · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "There's a lot of scary things here, but to me what is most scary is that American copyright owners can mobilize foreign police to do their bidding."

    Perhaps dantheman82 needs to understand the concept of international copyright law. Many countries, including those in the story, have agreements to enforce each other's copyrights.

    The sites being shut down were rampantly violating the copyrights of an organization big enough to fight back.

    What's scary is that the submitter thinks shutting these sites down is somehow wrong and unjust. There are a lot of things wrong with the big music companies, but this is not one of them.

    If there's something to be angry about, be angry that these governments wouldn't take the time and effort to protect your small time products in the same manner they protect the big big time products.

    1. Re:International Copyright Law by hyphz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > "There's a lot of scary things here, but to me
      > what is most scary is that American copyright
      > owners can mobilize foreign police to do their
      > bidding."
      > Perhaps dantheman82 needs to understand the
      > concept of international copyright law. Many
      > countries, including those in the story, have
      > agreements to enforce each other's copyrights.

      I think it's more the fact that they can get the police in another country to shut down a copyright violator, whereas Joe Average can't get the police in their own country to catch the person who burgled him..

  10. Re:What does mobilizing foreign police actually me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This would be scary, if you think that taking sites down was not just and legitimate.

    No, it's scary full-stop. The problem isn't that the sites were shut down, it's that police have been arrseting people. This should be a civil matter, not a criminal one. I was under the impression that copyright infringement was only a criminal matter in the USA - what are local police doing getting involved? It should be lawyer letters to their ISP, not people with guns coming to take you away.

  11. Easily impressed? by Angst+Badger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's a lot of scary things here, but to me what is most scary is that American copyright owners can mobilize foreign police to do their bidding.

    Did you miss out on the CIA campaigns of assassination in the 1960's and 1970's? If the US government can mobilize foreign coups d'etat to snuff the democratically-elected leftist leaders of nascent democracies, then taking down a bunch of pimply-faced warez monkeys is neither surprising nor newsworthy.

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  12. Re:numbers?? by casuist99 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unfortunately, the timing of Suprnova and other torrent sites shutting down corresponds to the end of the fall term for most universities - so there is bound to be a decrease in internet and p2p traffic ANYWAY. I'm sure **AA will take credit for it anyway.

  13. Re:What does mobilizing foreign police actually me by iminplaya · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How convenient for you to ignore the immorality of copyright, prohibition, or Jim Crow laws. Some of those laws were repealed(we're working on the rest) due to the "immorality" of the people who had the guts to tell the lawmakers and police to go to hell and to ignore or openly violate bad law. As one that's dependant on the status quo, you could hardly know or care who the bad guys really are. You just believe what the authorities tell you.

    --
    What?
  14. Re:What does mobilizing foreign police actually me by Frizzle+Fry · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, it's been illegal to tape movies broadcast on television, all along? Illegal to tape radio? Illegal to copy your own VHS tapes?

    Believe it or not, some things are illegal while others aren't. Recording a show off television for personal use was always legal and is still legal. This is why you can legally own a Tivo. Distributing copies of movies on a massive scale and getting moeny for it (as these advertising- and donation-driven sites are doing) was always illegal and still is. In the 1980's if you were selling pirated video cassettes or tapes on the streets of New York, you were doing something illegal and could be arrested. Today, if you are offering pirated movies or music online, that is a crime and you can be arrested. The fact that it is happening online does not magically change things. It would appear that it is you who can't remember the past. What these sites were doing has never been permitted.
    --
    I'd rather be lucky than good.
  15. Re:OWNED!!!!!! by adeyadey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Already? Could that be proof that the RIAA are hiring hackers? :-)

    First I will say that I am not interested in downloading the vast bulk of stuff out there - Its way less hassle just to hire the DVD or tape it off TV or whatever.

    However I have always found the whole idea that just providing *links* (going right back to Napster) is some sort of criminal or civil offence.

    Look at it this way. If you sell ripped off CDs or DVD at a market & get caught, thats a copyright offence - ok.

    But if I just say to someone "I know of a guy in such-and-such a place that sells ripped off CDs or DVD " - should just providing that info (or link) an offence? So why just limit the principle to Copyright? Why not *ANY* sort of offence? If you provide a link (for whatever reason, and by this logic maybe even inadvertently) to a place that is engaged in some "illegal" activity, that becomes an offence, right?

    Essentially we just end up with a situation of "legislation creep" where the bounds of law expand to such an extent that it is impossible to avoid breaking the law in some trivial way - and you can be arrested on the whim of the authorities.

    And have you noticed the ever swelling prison populations (increasingly harvested as cheap/slave labour) around the world - UK, USA, maybe China..

    Orwell anyone?

    --
    "You lied to me! There is a Swansea!"