Slashdot Mirror


First Swede Prosecuted For File Sharing

praps writes "The Local reports that a 27-year old man who allowed people to download a film from his PC has become the first Swede to be charged with illegal file sharing, after a tip-off from the country's notorious Anti-Piracy Bureau. It's a critical test case, as prosecutors say that anything less than a prison sentence would make future prosecutions unlikely." From the article: "The case was brought after a tip off from Antipiratbyrån (APB), a lobby organization set up by the media industry to combat illegal downloading in Sweden. Since the man was reported APB has found itself in hot water, with an Internet company accusing the organization itself of illegally downloading films and games.

3 of 432 comments (clear)

  1. Prison? by ram4 · · Score: 5, Informative

    A prison sentence for copyright infrigement? Are we loosing the sense of proportion here?

    What about murderers? Oh right, they also get prison sentences.

  2. Pirate Bay by kiveol · · Score: 5, Informative
    The person in charge of Pirate Bay (a major BitTorrent site) has been flaunting the fact that laws in the US/EU don't have any effect in Sweden. http://static.thepiratebay.org/legal/

    This could be the end of the low ratio of torrents deleted vs. the law suits...

  3. Re:Less than prison is ineffective?? by Dice+Fivefold · · Score: 5, Informative

    The reason the prosecutors want a prison sentence is this:
    According to Swedish secrecy law, the ISPs can only be ordered to reveal the identities behind IP numbers if the crime is worth a prison sentence. This case will serve as a precedent. If this guy is spared from prison (very likely), ISPs will no longer reveal file sharers identity.