ThePirateBay.org Raided and Shut Down
An anonymous reader writes "ThePirateBay.org, a longtime fixture of the BitTorrent community, is currently under investigation. Slyck.com is reporting their servers have been seized by the Swedish police." What's really interesting about them is the strange political power that they held in their homeland. There was much discussion even of a political party. This will be interesting to watch unfold.
What we probably have here is pressure (who doesn't doubt it didn't go down like this) from a foreign organisation to shut down something that's legal under Swedish law. (The torrent files themselves contain no copyrighted information).
Is this going to permanently shutdown thepiratebay.org? I doubt it.
Is this going to help the Pirate Party's chances for election in the September elections and be detrimental to the content oligopolist's interests in the long run? Hell yes.
Mildly offtopic, if TPB is shutdown, the thing I'm going to miss most is their 'legal' section (with legal threats + responses) - here's one of my favorite responses (via google cache): (in response to a threat from Sega europe)
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
From the first link, the aims of the Pirate Party seem to be:
My work here is dung.
There's nothing really strange about it. Anyone can start a political party, and anyone who does so can get elected provided they get enough votes. Hell, if someone started a party like this in Norway, I'd vote for it.
I bet it was really ninjas.
I wonder if this has something to do with Piratebay not keeping stats on seeders/leechers/downloads for the last little while (though they had recently resumed doing this).
Odd that they did this one year ago, when they went down for maintenance.
/ 000159.php?coral-no-redirect
(coralized link)
http://www.btflux.com.nyud.net:8080/archives/news
So, from TFA;
According to The Pirate Party, a Swedish copyright reform organization, the raid also seized Piratbyrån's (the Pirate Bureau) servers. In addition, The Pirate Party reports "...the servers where located in a protected area, to which the police had no legal right to enter..." Approximately 50 police participated in the raid, which placed into custody two PirateBay.org personnel.
Now I remember reading the legal threats page, and the phrase normally went along the lines of "US Copyrights Mean Nothing Here".
What changed? Sending letters is one thing, but something pretty heavy must be going on to warrant that kind of response.
Can any of our swedish friends fill in the gaps here? I'm sure we're missing something.
Yarr! Imagine all the booty those law enforcement agents got their hands on!
Yarrrrr! This be a travesty matey!
It is "strange" from a US centric point of view.
The pirate party is probably nothing more than a publicity stunt, however the impact that this question had on other Swedish political parties is quite substantial. This weekend the rather influential green party decided that they were pro-filesharing (although with some restrictions) and earlier representatives from other parties have said the same thing. While it probably won't have a major impact on the upcoming election in September it will none the less be an important question for some people.
In their native Sweden, ThePirateBay.org enjoyed a level of immunity from copyright prosecution rarely seen in the file-sharing world. Often defiant in the face of those wishing to enforce their intellectual property rights, ThePirateBay.org would go on to become one of the premier BitTorrent indexing and tracking sites.
As one of the largest trackers, ThePirateBay.org largely replaced the demise of the SuprNova.org search engine. SuprNova.org met its demise in late 2004, when it was under pressure from the entertainment industry to shut it operation down. Conversely, such pressure has been ineffective against ThePiratebay.org.
When such political pressure fails, the use of force is typically the next course of action. In a move that many thought would never come, Slyck.com learned this morning that ThePirateBay.org was raided by Swedish police.
"...The police right now is taking all of our servers, to check if there is a crime there or not (they are actually not sure)," ThePirateBay.org spokesperson "brokep" told Slyck.com.
The seizure of ThePirateBay.org's entire server farm will guarantee this BitTorrent tracker will remain offline until the police complete their investigation. Whether this will keep ThePirateBay.org offline indefinitely is another matter.
"We are not sure when it will return, but we are moving it to another country if necessary," brokep said.
According to The Pirate Party, a Swedish copyright reform organization, the raid also seized Piratbyrån's (the Pirate Bureau) servers. In addition, The Pirate Party reports "...the servers where located in a protected area, to which the police had no legal right to enter..." Approximately 50 police participated in the raid, which placed into custody two PirateBay.org personnel.
The premature departure of ThePirateBay.org marks a significant turning point in the BitTorrent community. Although it's not currently known what, if any, entertainment entity is behind this raid, failure to secure ThePirateBay.org's permanent removal will only bolster this tracker's position of defiance.
NOOOOOOOOOO!!!
At least they waited until after the season finale of Lost.
I don't know about other torrent sites, but TPB was ridiculous. Once there was a torrent of Lost in HD, with the commercials edited out, posted about 40 minutes after the original airing of that episode ended on the east coast.
Here is a quote from Pirate Bay as the servers were being hauled off:
"Vergoofin der flicke stoobin mit der børk-børk yubetcha!"I like downloading Battlestar Galactica as much as the next guy, but sites like Pirate Bay are almost exclusively used to enable distribution of illegal videos and pirated software.
Let's face it, it's illegal and they got caught.
boxlight
It will surely become very expensive takedown since it seems they also took servers from other companies which were on the same ISP as TPB, smells lika a few lawsuits here :)
Looks like we all got had... Server maintenance.
:)
I love these guys.
Please let me finish freeing the flow of information, specifically Season 4 of Family Guy. Thank you.
Ignoring the WTO and WIPO... Two Ticks (I assume sweden is a two tick system of some desc)
thank god, 24 is finished !!
The should have stopped taunting the MPAA, RIAA, and just about every Hollywood movie house. Those entities combined have an enormous amount of influence and power. It was just a matter of time unfortunately.
http://religiousfreaks.com/This is another story of Bonny and Clyde going down the drain.
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
Well, I feel the police are being heavy handed, but given the smug, supercilious and downright annoying tone of their responses to legal threats, its pretty hard not to feel a little schadenfreude that their bluster has been pricked and their bluff called.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
They didnt even get a chance to seed Pirates of the Carribean: The Dead Mans Chest...Its unfairs I tells ya!
Thar she blows!!!!
IANA(.se)L, but I wonder.. let's say I was using TPB's tracker to share some stuff I had full legal right to. Public Domain, Creative Commons, original material, and such. With TPB shut down, would people like me be able to file some sort of legal grudge against the Swedish police?
Slashdot Burying Stories About Slashdot Media Owned
Have a look at http://stats.autonomica.se/mrtg/sums/Stockholm_GE. html. The fact that the pirate bay clearly affected the total bandwidth of the entire city of Stockholm says something of how big the site is.
If file-sharing friendly Sweden can go down, what could happen for other countries? This doesn't bode well for private trackers. Some are hosted in the Netherlands (Demonoid, Empornium, Pure TnA) or Canada (BitMeTV). Sweden-based TvTorrents might be next. Maybe its time to stop donating funds to the private trackers lest one gets accused of funding piracy...
This, I think, clearly shows the need for a distributed publish/search mechanism for BitTorrent, like eMule's Kad network.
evidence of it being a hoax?
A turkish "wiki" like site has been stopped via country DNS servers of Turkish Telecom , they had sort of indictment for 4-5 days and now they are "off the air" again.
Site http://www.eksisozluk.com/ english info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eksi_Sozluk
What they did? Some guy added sort of sarcastic comment about "weed" which actually warns people about its dangers.
Site is (sadly) turkish so it couldn't make news I think. Another thing I suspect is, they still don't want such news about Turkey on international media as many of them are _actual_ media people.
After the latest closure, I ignore such things and giving this information. Sorry guys, this is NOT a way to defend your image as country.
It is up to moderators of slashdot to release this info. Sorry for posting as AC but I see people get censored by DNS server here!
NOOOOOOO!!!!!!
From TFA it stated that the servers were simply being taken to be searched for possible criminal actions. Torrent files are not illegal in Sweden, so I would think that servers will be searched and found clean and returned and hooked back up. I didn't see anything in TFA that said anything about them being shut down forever, just simply taken offline for a search.
-tgpo
with respect to: .torrent files, not actual copyrighted material.
The uncertainty on the part of the police may stem from the fact ThePirateBay.org's servers only host
I find it hard to beleive that copyright law will cover this. I wonder what USA law states, and I wonder if our laws can't prosecute anyone and that is why torrent file sharing is relatively untouched. It is almost like trying to prosecute the gun makers for criminals using guns, wait a minute we already did that!
Now with these guys, perhaps the DA (or equiv) is hoping to score himself some judicial activist judges who are not afraid to identify ostensible theft as theft. They may not care what a .torrent contains, instead they'll just see a festival of crime that needs to be dealt with facing little or no reprecussion from, say, a higher court overturning the verdict because the judicial branch does not wait for the legislative branch to tweak laws.
The Pirate Bay is banking on what I'm describing not happening. Of course I'm using the US as a model, I have no idea what this government is like, but I'm guessing that there are similarities.
as a swedish citizen and human this is like a slap in the face 8P
With any legal system there are a million of loopholes, that his how the lawyers make their big bucks. It seems like one of those MPAA/RIAA/Microsoft/Adobe lawyers found a loophole in the Swedish law after all.
It seems the like the guys at the piratebay.org has fun with the legal threats, insulting all those idiots, I wouldn't be surprised that a good number of them took it personally, knowing how big and inflamed their egos are. Does it mean the bad guys win after all?
but swedish police officers might have not liked when they were told to "sodomize themselves with retractable batons".
http://www.aftonbladet.se/vss/nyheter/story/0,2789 ,834356,00.html
For the benefit of those who don't speak swedish, here's a short summary:
3 people have been arrested, age 22, 24 and 28. They have not been charged, but are taken in because they the police suspect they have violated copyright laws. The persons are directly connected to TPB.org. They are as of an hour ago still under interrogation. 50 police men have worked on the case.
A Swedish newspaper confirms that it has received a press release from the Swedish police in this article (sorry, only in Swedish, but it's light on details anyway)
Big sites like TPB are too much of a target for the <local MPAA/RIAA equivalent%gt;. However one already sees masses of small private trackers with only a few hundred users. The disadvantages of lots of limited access private trackers are obvious, but good luck to the authorities trying to shut them all down.
Oh no... it's the future.
Now I feel guilty about ad-blocking the banners on there. . .
-CR
"So is the BSD licence even more 'free' (than GPLv2)? Yes. Unquestionably." --Linus Torvalds (TinyURL.com/2vugzl)
"The Pirate Bay nedstängd
Polisen genomförde idag en rad husrannsakningar mot lokaler där The Pirate Bay bedriver sin verksamhet. Klockan 12 30 stängdes sidan thepiratebay.org ned.
The Pirate Bay var fram tills igår knutpunkten för en stor del av världens illegala fildelning. Enligt egna uppgifter fanns det en dryg miljon användare som kunde laddade upp och ned främst filmer, spel och musik. Genom sin storlek och uttalade målsättning att hänga ut och håna berörda upphovsmän gjorde man The Pirate Bay känd över hela världen. Sverige blev internationellt känt som en fristad för dem som begick upphovsrättsbrott på Internet. Detta utnyttjades ekonomiskt för en omfattande försäljning av annonser, porreklam och insamling av donationer.
Det är bra att den svenska polisen nu prioriterar denna typ av brottslighet. Det är upphovsrätten som finansierar nyskapandet inom film, datorspel, musik och övrig kultur. Den som bryter mot upphovsrättslagen stjäl från framtidens kreatörer och biopublik. Därför är stängningen av The Pirate Bay bra för alla oss som uppskattar ny film och underhållning säger Henrik Pontén, jurist på Antipiratbyrån.
Svenska produktioner drabbas i hög grad av den illegala nedladdningen, säger Per-Erik Wallin, Föreningen Sveriges Filmproducenter. Om svenska filmer finns tillgängliga på nätet före premiären innebär det minskade chanser att filmerna ska spela hem produktionskostnaden och mindre medel för att göra nästa film. Det drabbar både manusförfattare, regissörer, skådespelare och filmarbetare."
Roughly translated
"The pirate bay closed
Today the police raided multiple places were The Pirate Bay conducts its operations. At 12.30 the site thepiratebay.org was closed.
The pirate Bay was until yesterday the center for a large part of the worlds illegal filesharing. According to piratebay itself there was over a million users who could upload or download foremost movies, games and music.
By its size and outspoken goal of ridiculing authors The pirate Bay got known all over the world.
Sweden got known internationally as an asylum for those who commited copyright crimes on the internet. This was use economicaly for a large scale sale of adds, pornadds and donations.
It is good that the swedish police now priority this kind of crime. It is the copyright that finances creation in movies, computergames, music and other culture. Whoever breaks the copyright steals from future auothors and cinema audience. Therefore the closing of The Pirate Bay is good for all of us that apreciate new Movies and entertainment says Henrik Pontén, legal advisor at Antipiratbyrån.
Swedish productions are very much affected by illegal downloading, say Per-Erik Wallin, Föreningen Sveriges Filmproducenter. If swedish movies are availible on the net before the premiere chances are smaller that the movies will get the production cost back and less means to make the next movie. It affects both scriptwriters, directors, actors and filmcrews."
Note that this truly is a crappy translation.
I must admit, I'm very surprised that it has come to this. I had expected the xIAAs to resort to blackmale/extortion/kneecapping to get the root name servers (in the USA) and such to just stop serving DNS records for them... you know, the whole reason everyone outside the USA is against the US Government retaining some form of control over the root servers?
Imagine: An old man in a corner... i talk to him and he tells me where to get illegal drugs, but he does not have anything. Even he does not carry the drugs, isn't he guilty anyway?
Let's hope all their server's run free software. I wouldn't put it past them to vengfully do something like this and then "Al Capone" the owners with a law suit over a $20 peice of warez on their server and sue them into the ground over it.
Windows has more viruses because linux has more virus coders.
that tommorrow last year the exact same thing "happened" and it was hoax. I haven't read the article because the server appears to be slashdotted, but it seems awefully suspicious that the same story of TPB being raided by Swedish police shows up again a year later almost to the day.
Between /. and digg that news article is not working. Here is a mirror of the article. Too bad /. doesn't have a mirroring service like digg . =(
In other news, the global warming index increased unexpectedly by 1.2% this morning.
Indeed. Albeit only im not swedish.
Read radical news here
ThePirateBay.org Raided - Servers Seized
.torrent files, not actual copyrighted material. As a tracker, ThePirateBay.org's function is to index .torrent files and to direct BitTorrent traffic and maintain the swarm (uploads and downloads.) The downloaded .torrent file contains all the necessary information to locate and download the queried file. The legality of indirectly linking to copyrighted material has yet to be tested by Swedish courts.
May 31, 2006
Thomas Mennecke
In their native Sweden, ThePirateBay.org enjoyed a level of immunity from copyright prosecution rarely seen in the file-sharing world. Often defiant in the face of those wishing to enforce their intellectual property rights, ThePirateBay.org would go on to become one of the premier BitTorrent indexing and tracking sites.
As one of the largest trackers, ThePirateBay.org largely replaced the search engine SuprNova.org. SuprNova.org met its demise in late 2004, when it was under pressure from the entertainment industry to shut it operation down. Conversely, such pressure has been ineffective against ThePiratebay.org.
When such political pressure fails, the use of force is typically the next course of action. In a move that many thought would never come, Slyck.com learned this morning that ThePirateBay.org was raided by Swedish police.
"...The police right now is taking all of our servers, to check if there is a crime there or not (they are actually not sure)," ThePirateBay.org spokesperson "brokep" told Slyck.com.
The seizure of ThePirateBay.org's entire server farm will guarantee this BitTorrent tracker will remain offline until the police complete their investigation. The uncertainty on the part of the police may stem from the fact ThePirateBay.org's servers only host
Whether this will keep ThePirateBay.org offline indefinitely is another matter.
"We are not sure when it will return, but we are moving it to another country if necessary," brokep said.
According to The Pirate Party, a Swedish copyright reform organization, the raid also seized Piratbyrån's (the Pirate Bureau) servers. Piratbyrån is a educational and quasi-political organization which performs a public servic role similar to The Pirate Party. In addition, The Pirate Party reports "...the servers where located in a protected area, to which the police had no legal right to enter..." Approximately 50 police participated in the raid, which placed into custody two PirateBay.org personnel.
The premature departure of ThePirateBay.org marks a significant turning point in the BitTorrent community. Although it's not currently known what, if any, entertainment entity is behind this raid, failure to secure ThePirateBay.org's permanent removal will only bolster this tracker's position of defiance.
The Pirate Bureau have set up a temporary news blog to inform the public about this whole incident: http://piratbyran.blogspot.com/
Shutting down The Pirate Bay can be compared to shutting down Google, by Swedish laws. Both sites supply a search engine with which you can find legal and illegal material on the internet. TPB will prevail.
It should have read (What the Swedish antipiracy firm (APB) has to say)
I've read reports that the admins of Pirate Bay are only updating their servers. I'm afraid the proverbial wool has been pulled over your eyes. If any of you have the IRC information for Pirate Bay, you can find out for yourself.
Simply taken offline to be searched, hmmm... I wonder how common is this procedure by swedish police and what triggered it. If I had business there i wouldn't like to have servers hijacked, especially if the reason is that I legally pissed off some foreign IP nazis.
---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
It's as if millions of geeks cried out at once... and were suddenly silenced.
Please see: The Local in English. Aftonbladet in b0rk b0rk.
...I ran a sweedish bittorrent tracker with James Woods and the 1989 Denver Broncos.
I can sort of believe that they had no illegal copies of anything in the office where The Pirate Bay was located. It makes it easier for them to wipe their hands of any wrongdoing.
However, as the main goal of the pirate bay is to facilitate copyright infringement, I find it very hard to believe that none of these guys had any illegal copies of stuff at home, on their laptops, etc.
Since their homes apparently also were raided, this is probably a way for the authorities to get to them, even if the Pirate Bay itself does nothing illegal. When you are involved in something like The Pirate Bay, it is too tempting to use it yourself.
Of course, if Swedish copyright law allows for downloading copyrighted material for personal use, then this will be fine as well.
Stallman isn't anti-copyright. He does want shorter copyright terms and non-commercial sharing allowed, though.
now where am i going to buy my software!?
The raid made the top position in Swedish MAINSTREAM news!!!
Hurray, maybe this is good?
Worse than that, what do you do when the government simply ignores the law? No need to mess with re-interpreting it. Just ignore it, like Bush, Cheney, and Gonzalez did with the wiretapping, phone call database, etc. I'm not trying to start a debate about spying on ones own citizens. But I am seriously concerned about the government doing so in violation of the law.
And more generally, in Sweden (and anywhere else), if the police simply seize things and are backed by the government, then being technically correct on the law may do little good.
These guys are TRUE patriots. They at least have the guts to question the status quo and actively practice their philosophy(bringing joy to the masses)It's impossible for me to think that these guys didn't see it coming and am very sure they have made provisions for a situation like this...All the cops want is the logs and I highly doubt they are stored on-site, in fact just on the measure of volume and efficiency it wouldn't make sense to dump that stuff locally. I also smell a conspiracy with the stench of something much more insidious. Let's *just say* that these guys are/were successful with starting a political party that was recognized by a government, any government, do you know how dangerous that is to the status quo? Others would eventually notice, and possibly follow.
Man, I hope you meant blackmail, 'cause blackmale as a form of retribution is totally different. Not a topic for a family-friendly board such as this.
warning: This post is likely to contain gobs of dripping sarcasm. Consume at your own risk.
only shows that are availible in my cable package but that I forget to DVR, am I a criminal? I am already paying to watch the shows, and archiving is fair use...if others DLing dont have the legal right, that is their problem!
...as if millions of downloads suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.
This is basically the same as American cops raiding Bell because the Yellow Pages lists the phone number of a paper mill, and paper can potentially be used to write harassing letters.
I can't find the number for "Endangered Species Deforestation Paper Co.," could I trouble you to look it up for me? And while you're in there I could really use some heroin, hand grenades, and a free copy of Ghostrider... FAST, before it hits theatres.
When I see reports from people that would stand to gain by crowing about a raid
saying that they got raided, along with it peppering the news feeds over there
in Sweden, I have some reservations about it being just a hoax.
That's not to say it's not- it's just I wouldn't be so certain as there's too much
going on right at the moment that run counter to that assessment.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
As if a million seeders and leechers cried out in agony, then were gone.....
The hypothesis is that it is easier to raid a bunch of real "hippies" than a group of lawyers-paying, well politically connected individuals and their limited liability companies.
Considering TPB probably wasn't obtaining money from the alleged infringement of copyright, they probably don't have the resources and organization of well prepared criminals or people operating borderline criminality.
It seems that if you steal an apple, harm yourself with drugs , copy a good without stealing it you are worse then a violent offender, certainly far worse then a white collar criminal. Except that for each Kennet Lay apparently-convicted we still have one thousand dangerous financial felons devouring society in absurdly, but almost legal ways.
Greetings,
The important Pirate Bay site is still up
http://www.puretna.com/
All is well.
Have I strayed onto your preciously guarded intellectual stomping ground of Swedish Law of Fair Retaliation? I don't see how my post implies that I'm claiming to know anything about Sweden. I'm just saying that "react in any way I like" is limited by the law, and that these events don't sound like normal law enforcement to me.
thepiratebay.org's response to Dreamworks:
You just know that everyone corporation and their lawyer quoted on the pirate bay website has been determined to find a way to get them.
...the content has no infringing info and they don't happen to have a DMCA type law on the books (Which Sweden doesn't, to the best of my understanding- it's why they were so defiant on the "DMCA" takedown notices they got...) because the bulk of Copyright law, internationally speaking, is only concerned with the actual act of infringement, not the "enablement" of it- so I don't know what the Police there are reaching for on this.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
..where exactly? We should be told!
instead they'll just see a festival of crime that needs to be dealt with facing little or no reprecussion.
I get really tired of people gleefully circumlocuting around this issue. Yes, the technology exists to make this sort of thing easy to get away with under laws meant for less complicated times. No, copyright infringement should not be a _crime_ -- it is (or should be returned to) a tort. But, the bottom line is, if you want the product and want more of it to be produced, this sort of activity, barring some other form of payment, is not economically sustainable.
All these asinine "adapt or die" arguments don't really help, unless you want everything to have more gratuitous product placement than an Austin Powers movie and, frankly, what the hell is with such a shiatty attitude toward the companies that produce the products people just can't seem to live without? If I felt that hostile towards, say, my car manufacturer, I wouldn't go around stealing their cars or making knock-off copies, I'd simply take my business elsewhere and wash my hands of them completely. It all smacks of 4yo's toy store tantrum after they've been told they can't have some stupid, useless, overpriced trinket they'll be bored with in five minutes anyway.
In Russia, anything goes... Right?
If you don't think they can make a majority, then voting for them based solely on this one issue as a protest is useless. Single-issue candidates can always stir emotions, but they rarely can do anything worth while on other issues that have a more profound effect upon your life. What are their positions on anything other than copyright issues?
Too many people already vote based upon pet peeves, rather than "the whole package". Which candidate for the job will do the least damage to you overall is the way to go. Some years back, an aviation organization I belong to endorsed a particular candidate as being "friendly to our cause", neglecting his record on economic issues. While he has occasionally voted pro-aviation, his real track record neutral at best. And his stance on other issues can best be summarized as, "anyone who can afford to fly needs to be sending that excess capital to Washington for ME to spend!"
Local (real, not bloggers) news agencies have interviewed the police regarding this.
It's about as real as it can get.
you can get an alternative from
http://www.newnova.org/
"It is copyright that finances creativity in film, videogames, music and other culture."
Funny, I have observed that pretty much all my favorite creators of film, videogames and music, have in common that they don't really care that much when people infringe a bit on their copyrights.
Frog blast the vent core.
...they're hoping that someone posts a link to a repacement site...
"I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
2000 members? Wow. Half of those are probably teenagers. I'm guessing the pirate party might get 5000 votes in national elections - at the most. That's a long way from a seat in parliament and even further from any real political power.
Political power, huh? Return with a seat in parliament and I might lift an eyebrow...
Short answer is no.
But real question is why is it illegal to buy or sell drugs? Often cited reason is that they promote crime, but that is more caused by fact that drugs are illegal rather than by drugs themselves. In effect governement that criminalises drugs is giving subsidisies to criminal organizations that would not be providing expensive alternatives were it not for governement making it illegal to provide drugs through normal channels.
Social negative impact would be restricted to those who use drugs and people could easily choose not to associate with them and problem would be gone.
But one plus side of criminalisation of drugs is that it support big governement and we know big governement is double plus good, don't we?
Christian Engström, Former Member of the European Parliament 2009-2014 for The Pirate Party, Sweden
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Help a man when he is in trouble and he will remember you when he is in trouble again.
The vast majority of Vikings were Norwegion not Swedish. My Viking ancestors kicked your ancestors buttocks. Be nice or I'll throw lutefisk at you.
"(The torrent files themselves contain no copyrighted information)."
The same could be said for the getaway driver.
"Is this going to permanently shutdown thepiratebay.org? I doubt it."
Proably not, but it does wipe the smug smile off their face.
4) Person pirating buys the copy of the game or music for himself and decides to share.
5) Person pirating borrows the copy of the game or music from his buddy and decides to share.
6) Person rents the movie or game and rips the content from the disc.
7) Person pirating sneaks into a movie/concert with a recording device and makes a recording.
In reality, 4, 5, and 6 happen more often than any one of the previous three- it's where the bulk of the pirated stuff that's not screeners or bootlegs comes from.
In reality, 7 happens for most of the pirated movies floating about that are not ripped from the DVD release. It's why they call them a "screener" or a "bootleg".
In the above three cases, which are actually the most common, the piracy did NOT involve ANY loss of property. It involved an act of infringement , which is a completely different act from theft- on the books and in reality. But then, you frame it that way probably to make you feel better about the intermingling of legal concepts that the BSA, RIAA, and MPAA have tried to promulgate over the years now.
And, before you go off on me, saying I'm a pirate- I'm a content and "IP" producer that takes great exception to how things are progressing in the world. I've written SF short stories. I've written software as works for hire and independently. I've got one US (soon International) Patent pending, with about 6+ more about to be filed. You can be upset about it being infringement- that's the proper term, etc. and is what is actually going on in most cases. You shouldn't be upset about it being "theft"- because it isn't.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
pirate keep YOU at bay
You're all gonna feel such fools very, very soon.
For powerful pirates to be regarded as popular heroes among a local community, even to the point of having semi-official protected status, is not without precedent. The pirate Edward Teach, also known as Blackbeard, could not have operated for so many years in the Bahamas without numerous safe harbours and local bigwigs on his side, including the governor of the British colony of North Carolina.
But then, the British Crown gave protection and rewards to many pirates. Of course, the politically correct term was "privateers". Guys like Sir Francis Drake, Sir Henry Morgan, and Governor Woodes Rogers may have been regarded by other nations as murderers, thieves, slavers, and rapists, but to the British they were plucky men of renown.
So for ThePirateBay.org, this may not be the end, but only the beginning!
You are absolutely right, this is great publicity for piracy and piracy organizations. And we can make sure that even more persons hear about this, and make people understand just how many persons there are that care about this question and want the pirate bay to stay up. Here are some e-mail and postal addresses to the Swedish police, the anti piracy bureau (a swedish lobby organization like the riaa), and some important swedish politic organizations. If you're Swedish please pick a few of these and email/post a message and tell them what you think about this. Or even if you're not, do it anyway. It can't hurt. You can make a difference! If you're worried about åäö in the postal adresses, just use aao, it will get trought. The Goverment (postal): Sveriges riksdag 100 12 Stockholm Sweden Important Politicians: Göran Persson Fredrik Reinfeldt Lars Leijonborg Göran HÃgglund Lars Ohly Maud Olofsson Peter Eriksson Maria Wetterstrand Political Organizations (postal): Socialdemokratiska partistyrelsen 105 60 Stockholm Sweden Moderaterna Box 2080 103 12 Stockholm Sweden Folkpartiet Box 6508 Drottninggatan 97 1tr 113 83 Stockholm Sweden Kristdemokraterna Box 2373 103 18 Stockholm Sweden Centerpartiet Box 2200 103 15 Stockholm Sweden Miljöpartiet de Gröna Prästgatan 18 A Box 2136 103 14 Stockholm Sweden The Anti Piracy Bureau: Postal Adress: Antipiratbyrån S:t Eriksgatan 117A Box 23021 104 35 Stockholm Sweden Swedish police (different adresses are for different districts): e-mail: polismyndigheten@blekinge.police.se polismyndigheten@dalarna.police.se polismyndigheten@gotland.police.se polismyndigheten@gavleborg.polisen.se polismyndigheten@halland.police.se polismyndigheten@jamtland.police.se polismyndigheten@jonkoping.police.se polismyndigheten@kalmar.police.se polismyndigheten@kronoberg.police.se polismyndigheten@norrbotten.police.se polismyndigheten.skane@polisen.se polismyndigheten@stockholm.polisen.se polismyndigheten.sodermanland@polisen.se post@uppsala.polisen.se polisen@varmland.police.se polismyndigheten@vasterbotten.police.se polismyndigheten@vasternorrland.police.se polismyndigheten@vastmanland.polisen.se polismyndigheten@vastragotaland.polisen.se polismyndigheten@orebro.police.se polismyndigheten@ostergotland.police.se rikspolisstyrelsen@polisen.se skl@skl.police.se postals (the first one is the national one, so if you send do several of them, always send to this): Rikspolisstyrelsen Box 12256 102 26 Stockholm Sweden SKL - Statens Kriminaltekniska Laboratorium 581 94 Linköping Sweden Polismyndigheten i Blekinge lÃn Box 315 371 25 Karlskrona Sweden Polismyndigheten Dalarna Box 739 791 29 Falun Sweden Polismyndigheten Gotland Box 1153 621 22 Visby Sweden Polismyndigheten i Gävleborgs län Box 625 801 26 Gävle Sweden Polismyndigheten i Hallands län Box 1031 301 10 Halmstad Sweden Polismyndigheten i Jämtlands län Box 707 831 28 Östersund Sweden Polismyndigheten i Jönköpings län Box 618 551 18 Jönköping Sweden Polismyndigheten i Kalmar län Box 91 391 21 Kalmar Sweden Polismyndigheten i Kronobergs län Box 1211 351 12 Växjö Sweden Polismyndigheten i Norrbotten Box 50135 973 24 Luleå Sweden Polismyndigheten i Skåne 205 90 Malmö Sweden Polismyndigheten i Stockholms län 106 75 Stockholm Sweden Polismyndigheten i Södermanlands län Box 348 631 05 Eskilstuna Sweden Polismyndigheten i Uppsala län Box 3007 750 03 Uppsala Sweden Polismyndigheten Värmland Box 157 651 05 Karlstad Sweden Polismyndigheten i Västerbottens län Box 463 901 09 Umeå Sweden Polismyndigheten i Västernorrlands län Box 720 851 21 Sundsvall Sweden Polismyndigheten i Västmanlands län Box 9 721 03 Västerås Sweden Polismyndigheten i Västra Götaland Box 429 401 26 Göteborg Sweden Polismyndigheten i Örebro län Box 1804 701 18 Örebro Sweden Polismyndigheten i Östergötlands län Box 345 581 03 Linköping Sweden
So, if I search Google for free full copies of copyrighted software, is it Google's fault if I download one of those free copies?
If I understand Bittorrent correctly, one is downloading from other people, not TPB. So, TPB is like Google for Bittorrent, right?
In which case, they can't fairly shut one down without doing the same thing to the other.
TPB and Google provide a service. What people do with that service should be the people's fault.
"In a world that exists without walls and fences, who needs Windows and Gates?"
Yep, also the biggest evening newspaper in Sweden, Aftonbladet, has written about it (at least on their site, Aftonbladet.se the article is in Swedish).
By its size and outspoken goal of ridiculing authors The pirate Bay got known all over the world.
I don't believe that TPB ever mocked the AUTHORS of material. Rather, they mocked the COMPANIES and the lawyers that tried to enforce the copyright laws. Deservedly, too - even if there is some way to prosecute TPB, they should have known they can't hold American laws over their head as a threat. That just doesn't make sense.
Goo goo g'joob.
You making it sound like dealing drugs is in some way wrong!
Red Leader Standing By!
Nah, it's not very common over here. I can only remember one other "incident" since the middle of last year.
Only in that case, there actually took servers containing files.
i was talking about illegal drugs only, like cocaine, etc.
argh! i rarely download and when i do its usually from invite-only private torrent sites, never thepiratebay but this weekend i couldnt make it to the theater so i downloaded X-Men 3.. it was a horrible screener which i deleted after seeing how bad it was.. but now im probably fresh in their logs dammit
You misunderstand how the common law system works, as opposed to civil law that is used in Sweden and most other European countries.
Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
By killing Pirate Bay, you will make them more powerful than you ever imagined. Ok, whatever, off to the MANY other bittorent sites to get me some illegal media.
Meh.
What's wrong with porn? Talk about spreading FUD, use decent arguments next time please.
There are MANY other sites for torrents... not difficult to find. Ever 1 that is shut down, 2 more open.
Meh.
OK, sounds good. However, when I can have 500+ sources lined up for a big file in Emule and average 5kb/s down, 50kb/s up over a 3 day period, something is wrong with the implementation. BT currently does a moderately good job of offering appropriate returns for uploaders; Emule/Kad/Shareaza does not. Make it go even half as fast as a standard torrent and I'd consider using it.
Not to offend someone who might be an accomplished long-time net journalist or anything, but who the fuck is slyck.com? Does any other news site (or even a well-known blog) have this story? TPB has faked being shut down before, and some fourth-rate news sites bought the story last time, too. I wonder if anyone has checked with the Swedish authorities to see if they're claiming credit...
0 1 - just my two bits
Sooo, the police actually closed the website of a legal political party?
The only reason is that the server where in the same room?
This should really be a big discussion, at least with the Swedish laws and their point of view on freedom of speech.
Can anyone tell us if this will lead to a big political case? Or a case for the court?
I guess the party now will do a nice election.
"Genom sin storlek och uttalade målsättning att hänga ut och håna berörda upphovsmän gjorde man The Pirate Bay känd över hela världen."
Through it's size and expressed goal of hanging out and ridiculing famous authors The Pirate Bay was made famous all over the world.
Maybe thats a better translation. Ofcourse the text is mostly BS probably comparable to something the **AA could have written.
There is party that is closer to that than you think in the US...the Libertarian party. Too bad the Repub/Dem media suppresses any chance they get at face time so they never get enough mindshare :-P
Taken down searched and returned... but how long does it take to search them... I'm sure they can drag it on for months.
... even if it was on the personal machines of the arrested staff, who will more than likely have lots of pirated stuff on their home machines.
I know it's not the same thing but remember what happen with SJgames?
http://www.sjgames.com/SS/
It'll be months before they get some of their gear back, if the cops don't find anything and if they do they'll never get the machines back
I'm guessing that ThePirateBay is down for good, it'll be months before they get there gear back even if they don't get charged and if they don't have some off site back ups of their website and server set up, then they won't be able to set it back up in a hurry should they be able to afford new machines.
Well that's my guess anyway.
I am Swedish and I don't think that TPB has had much influence at all, laws and attitudes would have been just the same if this was an organization outside Sweden. My guess is that the presence of the organisation is simply reflecting current attitudes in general in Sweden today. It is notable that a minister in the socialdemocratic government downloaded mp3s, burned them to CD, and gave it to friend as a birthday present (Swedish article) already in 2000, without seeing any wrong with it.
An explanation to this phenomenon could be a tradition of relatively strong consumer protection laws (and traditions), and that the "personal use" clauses in copyright have always been defended here.
Reality or nothing.
Does anyone know or run a mirror with the content of the PirateBay? It should be our priority to make sure their data is backed up and safe from the Swedish gestapo.
My brother's talked with one of the three guys they took in (in a chatroom somewhere. The creator/owner goes to the same university as him).
Anakata, the creator/owner still haven't been let loose from the police yet, but i've heard he's pretty good at pissing people off and being cool with it, so that might be slowing things down.
/nt
Brackets contain world's first nanosig, highly magnified:[.]
Evidence? What evidence?
Oh, evidence that they were engaging in 100% legal activities? No need to gather that evidence; the operators admitted quite freely that they were engaging in operating a web site which distributed content which was copyrighted. Now, if they come to America the US government might have chosen to (illegally) convict them since our government seems to think that we ought to police the entire world, but they were still in sweden.
OBVIOUSLY someone got paid off to authorize this BS.
There is a huge benefit though:
It is very likely that once the operators are cleared of BS charges (what are they going to be charged with -- complying with the law?!?!) and the judge says "carry on then" that they'll go right back online, only they would likely do a major purge of all of the dead/unseeded torrents on the site.
(With that said, I miss suprnova
The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
I had a problem with The Pirate Bay, their cocky ways, and seemingly arrogant attitude against other people's property. It didn't feel right. It may have been legal in Sweden, but that doesn't make it right, just as much as something being illegal makes it wrong. I felt that this "information free" bullshit was just a cover, and thus I didn't use them. Even when I intended to pirate something out right. So until yesterday, I had a serious problem with The Pirate Bay.
Today I have an even bigger problem with the Swedish police. Unless there's something they know and I don't, it's still legal to link to copyrighted property in Sweden. Whether I like it or not, it's right or wrong, it's legal. So if that's all they're doing, why did the ops get busted?
I do NOT agree with The Pirate Bay's operator's personal beliefs. But I will voice my disagreement with those who wrongly opress the operators who have (to the best of my knowledge) not broken any laws. This is public, national power brought down on an individual. It's neither fair, nor right. Even less right than what the Pirate Bay did. I would compare it to the U.S. vs Iraq. Iraq may be in the bad, may have broken internation laws, but just because they did doesn't mean the U.S. can act lawlessly as it pleases. (FYI, I'm American, in case my previous comments were't obvious enough.)
Desh born, der ritt de gitt der gue, Orn desh, dee born desh, de umn børk! børk! børk!
We-a teke-a 50 cops. A geeve-a zem ell feereerms. Let zem etteck ze-a serverroom. Add e-a leetle-a hostage-a teckeeng. And spen zhree veeks copyeeng ell ze torrents zet conteeen pr0n.
And then ve putta Ze Pirates into ze stew.
This unique sig is intended to make this user more recognisable.
you were totaly pwned.. can you just STFU?..
Unless TPB users or admins were downloading items from the torrent lists themselves. Not entirely an impossible scenario, and in that case you go from being purely a linker (in the technical sense) to actually being in possession of the copyrighted material.
I'm hoping they were smarter than this, but with their "you can't touch us" attitude it wouldn't be impossible for somebody to have strayed across the line. Hopefully we'll get an update on this soon.
If the servers are gone, shouldn't I get a no conection error and not a polite "site temporarily down. please check back later" message?
I mean, come on, 404 not "check back later."
Democracy serves the people so much better when there are only two parties to choose between.
my password really is 'stinkypants'
Since one of my main providers of .torrent files is now inactive, I would like to extend this question to the online community:
.torrent extension-- that I can utilize to make certain of my perpetuity of information flow?
.torrent files, so dont ask!
Is there any other reliable source of information--namely electronic information files of the
I would like not to disclose what I do with the
Likely:
a) The information on TPB was in a large-part posted by the members, but not the owners, of the site
b) Not all the information led to infringing torrents (there are lots of things that require large downloads, after all)
c) Therefore, while knowledge is in the hands of the owners, the supposed abuse is likely in the hands of the users.
google results for 'dvdrip filetype:torrent' about 10,900 (that number seems capped cause you get the same number for xxx torrents and other uhm... popular stuff)
Tapes cost less because they are of lesser quality and no one would purchase them if they cost more than CDs--they'd simply buy the CD and MAKE A TAPE.
You can call this a war or whatever and say that boycotts don't work, but talk of circumlocution, what the hell is defiantly ripping your music/movies/porn whatever without paying for it but a boycott?
You talk about "what are the retiring old folks supposed to do?" Well, christ, what about the old folks who WORK IN THE ENTERTAINMENT INDUSTRY? Not the mega-gabillionaires at top (be they "artist" or "suit"), but the armies of workaday S.O.B.s who will be first to feel the pinch come cost-cutting time?
The rest of your screed is simply "why the world sucks in general in the 21st century." Well, that's just dandy, but if your fucking CDs and DVDs are at the top of that list, I humbly suggest you have a MAJOR priority problem--quite akin to the aforementioned 4yo having a tantrum in a toy store.
Do you realise what you are saying!? Ok, let's do it your way then: Let's start rounding up everyone hosting, posting, using, creating content for anti-communist sites and porn-sites and start shipping them to China and Iran to take their due punishment! Are you ok with that? If you are not - read what you wrote again and then go and stand in a corner in shame repeating "I will think before I post".
Cheers..
...can be read at http://www.piratpartiet.se./ English one to come.
Here is my very rough NON-OFFICIAL translation:
"PRESS RELEASE
For immidiate publication
31 may 2006
For more information, see party webpage at http://www.piratpartiet.se/ or contact Rickard Falkvinge, +46733555293
The Pirate Party critizises the police for illegitimate intrusion
Swedish police has today taken all the servers of The Pirate Bay into custody, along with the servers of a number of other unrelated web hotel customers. The police chose to do this despite the fact that the services provided by the world's largest bittorrent tracker has been deemed fully legal in Sweden.
The police means, according to an operator of the site, that the police wants to test the legality of the activities.
"Which company would have accepted this treatment?", says Rickard Falkvinge, party leader of the Pirate Party. "Which Company would have accepted that the police arrived and ceased all company activity, before proven guilty of crime?. In this case the Pirate Bay has not commited any crime. They are disliked by large american media interests, that is true. But it is not a crime to be disliked, and definately not a reason for the swedish police to enter and shut down one of the worlds' largest communities for youth people."
"This is exactly the kind of raids that the Pirate Party wants to stop", concludes Rickard. "When the society sends the police on its youth population because they listen to music and watches movies, then it is not the youth that are wrong. Then it is the society that has to do better."
About the Pirate Party:
The Pirate Party is the largest of the new parties for the national elections in Sweden 2006. The party was founded 1 january this year and promotes an open information society, shared culture, and protected private life.
It appears as if the Pirate bay hasn't broken any laws in Sweden. I feel that this raid was politically motivated and will amount to nothing more than a hefty amount of free publicity. Whats the monetary value of that in todays world? One would think that the operators will be released and the equipment returned once this baseless action has reached completion. This may also lead to any munber of lawsuits for being falsly detained and/or the unwarranted seizure of property. At best this is a trivial matter that should be resolved soon.
Full article in English here with recent quotes direct from the Swedish police and the leader of the Pirate Party. Apparently it's a very early stage in the investigation - so maybe more arrests to come?
Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
Who's to say the servers aren't on a MPAA/RIAA plane being sent to another country for interogation? "Hmmm, little server, you seem to be full of .torrent files. Well here in the US that is a bad thing. A very bad thing. Who are your contacts?"
Plain and simple. People who provide use the technology or provide the technology, must take precautions against abusing the technology.
If you buy a marketspace in Moscow, you are in charge of making sure that no illegal activity is going on in the market.
Hit me with your mods.
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
What's actually going on here?-Are is this just par for course? Is our understanding correct that they may actually be just investegating for something completely unrelated? Or is it simply that due to them making a political party someone got cheased off and called in a favor to rattle them?
At least they waited until after all the season finales before raiding.
That site was one-stop shopping for all my distro needs. Why would they raid and take down a legit service?
http://news.google.com/news?oe=UTF-8&client=firefo x-a&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&ie=UTF-8&ta b=wn&q=+%22pirate+bay%22&btnG=Search+News
Apparently noone cares for Pirate Bay except for techno-savvy juveniles.
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
From the take-down notice on http://piratebay.org/ "The police took down all servers in the rack, including the non-commercial site Piratbyrån, the mission of which is to defend the rights of TPB via public debate."
Wtf?!? Did Piratbyrån have anything illegal on their servers or were they just supporting TPB by means of debate? Did the police just think "hey, there's the server hosting that annoying organization morally supporting piracy, let's take that down now that we're here anyways."?
I have to admit that I'm a bit afraid that they might succeed in closing down TPB. The allegations apparently are "breach of copy-right law, alternatively assisting breach of copy-right law." - the alternative is probably how they're going to get them.
I'm crossing my fingers and hoping that something will go wrong in the trial and we'll gte PirateBay back.
"Live free or don't."
How long until the last backup goes live on some other server somewhere else?
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
Yes, news papers always are factually correct and never publish false information. Never.
I don't know; is there some sort of law that they could be charged under (and be innocent of)? In that case, as long as there's a criminal investigation, most countries allow the police to seize a group's property for evidence gathering. Depending on the country, they might not even have to bring it back for years.
I, of course, can only speak of the US as in the case of Steve Jackson Games vs. Secret Service where a game company's computers were raided for connections to a hacker ring due to their research for their cyberpunk game. It took them years to get their stuff back and to get awarded damages.
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
Support the pirate party by donating a few bucks. More here: http://www2.piratpartiet.se/#donate
Last time they were "shut down", turns out they were redesigning the page, and soon became grand theft pirate bay, when they released san andreas.
They sure got a laugh out of that
Open Source Java Web Forum with LDAP authentication
I was wondering why it was so hot this morning!
What'chu lookin' at Willis?
Parent does not understand GPL
... I bet if this was the Ninja Bay instead the police would have never been able to penetrate their fortress and arrest them.
You have FAR, FAR more access to all those old cultural tidbits than at any time in the history of the industry. What are you, 19? 20? CDs now cost LESS than they did when I was in college -- and if I need to explain the economics of that, you need to go back to class. Movies that used to take YEARS to come out on video are now on the racks before they've left the 2nd-run theaters. All those old T.V. shows you claim are being held hostage and thrown into incinerators are now being pumped out like crazy on DVD when just fifteen years ago, no one would even THINK about putting them out -- and they come out on DVD practically instantaneously after season end and an entire season on eight DVDs costs HALF what a single VHS used to -- NOT adjusted for inflation.
It's so indicative of a spoilt rotten pubescent culture when they get more for less and scream that something's been taken from them, so they want it all for free. Fark that. I know people whose lives depend on their paychecks from the movie and music industries. If you want to make them casualties in your petty little war, then grow up and fuck you.
I fear there is a greater enemy afoot. After carefull consideration and a flurry of domestic calls its obvious this is the work of a mockingbird. Unfortunately there is no way to kill a mockingbird... or is there?
While I am in the US, I know that this is a 'freedom of press' that affects us all.
I hope there is a government that can stand up to the US worldwide publishing suppression.
For the most part you are correct. My problem comes in when you consider that these "content creators" have taken and used other peoples ideas, or "Intellectual Property" if you will, without consent to create their works. It's a little like the old joke, "You can't rob me! I stole this money fair and square!"
Someone should get Greenpeace on the case. The last thing we need for the planet is to wipe out the last of the true pirates. arrr.
I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
Maybe the cops wouldn't have been on to them so quickly if they had gone with a more subtle domain name.
I came, I saw, I left. It looked better in the brochure.
Do the Swedish Police need a search warrant to conduct this raid/ seize servers? I would assume so, normally evidence is required that the law has been broken before a warrant is issued. Can somebody enlighten us about Swedish law on this point ?
It's more like photocopying the entire book and taking the copy home with you. You get to enjoy the content any time you want without going back to the store. And although reading the book in the store might be legal (but rude), photocopying the whole thing is certainly copyright infringement and against the law.
Art19 of Human rights: http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to
seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
Now who is the pirate again? As I see it, people that call us pirates because we gladly spread information through informatic media are really violating one of the most forgoten articles in the bill of human rights, which in fact was signed by almost all the countries in the world.
Please spread your ideas throught europe and the rest of the world, because we need paladins for a cause that most people wont even see it until we reach a police or fascist state.
Cheers: Z
I'm trying to get modded "Interesting Flamebait Informative and Insightful Redundant Troll" *-* Please Help *-*
Theft: TAKING something you're not authorized to take.
Copyright infringement: COPYING or DISTRIBUTING something you're not authorized to (EVEN IF YOU CREATED IT!!! [*]).
Theft is a a violation of someone's personal property rights (even if that someone is a firm or a government branch).
Copyright infringement is a violation of someone's copyrights (or Author's rights, depending on your venue).
copyrights =/= property rights: property rights are absolute, definitive, alienable rights based on "lawful possession" of a physical good. copyrights are relative, temporary rights to explore the monopoly of an intelectually-novel expression of an idea you had (and its mise-en-scene).
The violation of copyrights is NOT as severe as the violation of property rights EXACTLY because of the comparison between the nature of the rights: right to property is stronger than copyright, both are weaker than the right to physical safety, all of them weaker than the right of a living, breathing, out-of-the-womb human being to live (**)
(*) derivative works
(**) no, I am not and will not state that I am pro-choice or pro-life: I am stating that -- in a lot of jurisdictions -- the most valued right is the right to live for an already-born person (as in opposition to an in-the-womb person that may or not have the right to live depending on the jurisdiction).
It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
Wow! You're an idiot!
How DO YOU THINK they GET THE ORIGINAL ITEM?
Typically, they buy it in a store, it's given to them by the studio as a screener/review/demo copy, or (less often) copy it at the studio.
Shoplifting != piracy
Shoplifting !-->piracy
I "know people" who pirate movies, music, and software. If you broke into their houses you'd find shelves and shelves of store-bought movies, music, and software. Why? Because they're not shoplifters or thieves. They buy the things they love, and frequently make copies for their friends. Sometimes they set up torrents for them.
This is the norm- not your hypothetical thug who does a smash & grab at Best Buy. You're trying to tie together two crimes (theft of a physical item and copyright violation) that are fundamentally different and unrelated. Stop it. You're wrong, and you're making yourself look like an asshat.
Boundless Expansion, Self-Transformation, Dynamic Optimism, Intelligent Technology, Spontaneous Order- BEST DO IT SO!
So, obviously Swedish law does have the notion of secondary infringment (ie, even if no infringing materials. Now, whether the hosting of torrent files constitutes assisting breach according to Swedish law remains to be seen. I seem to remember that previous case law said that it wasn't - but my memory could be faulty.
Interestingly, they conclude with:
So, with all the fevered speculation, all we can really do is sit and wait for more details to emerge. I don't know if there is any sort of donations which can be made in the case that all of this is not a hoax, but if anyone knows, details would be appreciated. (Of course, this is an open invitation for any Swedish bloke to play the "I'm Spartacus! Donate to my
--Ng
PB/TPB down
PRESSRELEASE
For immediate publication
May 31, 2006
The police defrauded of the film industry to close down Piratbyrån
The police carried out today a razzia against The Pirate Bay, the world's bigest Bittorrent - tracker. The side has in several years been a node in the world for culture interested people in countries over the whole world. All from own produced essays to obscure Japanese music to video's of Schlagerfinalen has spridits with the aid of the technology.
On the actual servrarna has no illegal material existed. Torrent-filerna, länka as people uses in order to be meshed and to load the desired material contains only text that meagre is copyright protected.
"Antipiratbyrån has clearly misleaded the police in this case" states Tobias's Andersson on Piratbyrån. "one seems to have convinced it-inkompetenta police that servrarna in question is fulfilled with copyright protected materials. This is a coarse misuse of wealth money."
"concurrent has a majority other sides as existed on nearby servrar been confiscated. Häri lies the coarsest övertrampet. Antipiratbyrån has evidently defrauded the police to at the same time close down your antagonists, Piratbyrån."
"Piratbyrån has in 3 years seemed for an open debate around copyright questions and patents. We are a lot of agitated over that the film industry does not dare to take the debate, without wants to defraud politicians and police to outlaw antagonist and a big part of the Swedish people."
"purely practical means this såklart nothing pursues the world's file splitters. The exists other thousand's sides or networks for them that few the the wants to have. People change only place. Fildelningen functions equally a skin to draw, a cuts' head of grows the soon out 2 new. "
Piratbyrån was started the summer 2003 in order to elucidate and to discuss copyright questions. Piratbyrån means that the copyright in many cases has played out their role and instead in order to protect tex artists nearer prevents the creation and göder a few. Since the start has approximately 60 000 members registered itself on the homepage where one debates in forums and changes advice. Piratbyrån has also hållt presentations in the parliament, pursued various campaigns and the started world's bigest bittorrent-tracker ThePirateBay.org
__________________________________________
The Pirate Bay wild duck piratbyran ice down after a raid on our National Inspectorate of Strategic Products, our wild duck more customers server's are hold. We will post office mother INFO carcasses soon carcasses we know it.
post office curse village Piratbyran at 5:28 AM 47 co intended
About Me
Note: Don't ask me about the parts that didn't translate; I just copy and paste. I have no clue what the "wild duck... carcasses" in the last paragraph are about.
Find environmentally and socially responsible products on http://buy-right.net
Anyone who knows anything about distributing warez (or in this case, torrents) should know enough not to do it from a static domain name, much less via HTTP protocol.
Although, I'm equally amazed that archaic/old sites like FOSI are still up, after all these years.
the only permanence in existence, is the impermanence of existence.
Pretty amazing that we even had music, drama, and literature even before the invention of the respective recording technologies, isn't it.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Something tells me the UN is referring to things like math, science, history, and politics. Not the newest video game or latest music album.
Technology, the cause of and solution to all of life's problems.
Does anyone really believe this? A good movie makes money because people want to see it in the theater, and buy products based on it. For a current example, Pixar's "Cars" comes to mind. Is there any doubt that the toys alone will pay for the movie's production? Even when you consider the non-trademarked knockoffs that cheap toy manufacturers will produce? (Look out; they'll be the next target.)
As for "all of us that apreciate new Movies and entertainment", does anyone really believe that the theaters showing the newest Rob Schneider movie (for example) will be any less empty with TBP shut down?
Find environmentally and socially responsible products on http://buy-right.net
I wonder what this would do to their sister site (or so I think) puretna.com. They're still up the last time I checked.
Yes, that's why I posted as AC.
I apologize for not having a more complete translation of our proposal ready, but this is the basic idea.
At least in Europe, over 80% of the pharma companies' revenues come from the government (since we have universal medical coverage). The pharma companies claim that they have to charge several times more than the production costs in order to fund research. But they only spend 15% of their revenues on research. Most of the money they receive from the government actually goes to marketing (around 50%) and profit (around 15%).
If the government would fund research and the buying of the pills separately, the total bill would drop by at least 50%, since there would be no need for the excessive marketing any more. And there would be no need to keep the research results blocked by patents, since they would have been paid for already.
So there would be no need to threaten third world countries with economic sanctions just because they try to do what they can to provide AIDS medicine to their own population.
Christian Engström, Former Member of the European Parliament 2009-2014 for The Pirate Party, Sweden
Looks like Slyck has hit overload as an after effect.
:[http://www.slyck.com/news.php?story=1203]
.torrent files, not actual copyrighted material. As a tracker, ThePirateBay.org's function is to index .torrent files and to direct BitTorrent traffic and maintain the swarm (uploads and downloads.) The downloaded .torrent file contains all the necessary information to locate and download the queried file. The legality of indirectly linking to copyrighted material has yet to be tested by Swedish courts.
This is the error i get :
phpBB : Critical Error
Could not connect to the database
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Slyck.com 's article
ThePirateBay.org Raided - Servers Seized
May 31, 2006
Thomas Mennecke
In their native Sweden, ThePirateBay.org enjoyed a level of immunity from copyright prosecution rarely seen in the file-sharing world. Often defiant in the face of those wishing to enforce their intellectual property rights, ThePirateBay.org would go on to become one of the premier BitTorrent indexing and tracking sites.
As one of the largest trackers, ThePirateBay.org largely replaced the search engine SuprNova.org. SuprNova.org met its demise in late 2004, when it was under pressure from the entertainment industry to shut it operation down. Conversely, such pressure has been ineffective against ThePiratebay.org.
When such political pressure fails, the use of force is typically the next course of action. In a move that many thought would never come, Slyck.com learned this morning that ThePirateBay.org was raided by Swedish police.
"...The police right now is taking all of our servers, to check if there is a crime there or not (they are actually not sure)," ThePirateBay.org spokesperson "brokep" told Slyck.com.
The seizure of ThePirateBay.org's entire server farm will guarantee this BitTorrent tracker will remain offline until the police complete their investigation. The uncertainty on the part of the police may stem from the fact ThePirateBay.org's servers only host
Whether this will keep ThePirateBay.org offline indefinitely is another matter.
"We are not sure when it will return, but we are moving it to another country if necessary," brokep said.
According to The Pirate Party, a Swedish copyright reform organization, the raid also seized Piratbyrån's (the Pirate Bureau) servers. Piratbyrån is a educational and quasi-political organization which performs a public servic role similar to The Pirate Party. In addition, The Pirate Party reports "...the servers where located in a protected area, to which the police had no legal right to enter..." Approximately 50 police participated in the raid, which placed into custody two PirateBay.org personnel.
The premature departure of ThePirateBay.org marks a significant turning point in the BitTorrent community. Although it's not currently known what, if any, entertainment entity is behind this raid, failure to secure ThePirateBay.org's permanent removal will only bolster this tracker's position of defiance.
Why does yahoo do this
Torrents POINT to a hoster, Road signs point to a place (which could have illegal activity in it). So are road signs illegal also?
The Pirate Bay is not the Pirate Bureau (Piratbyrån), which in turn is not the Pirate Party (Piratpartiet). They just like each other very much.
Just so we're clear on that part. (And me, I'm not any of them.)
Google would be proud :) Hoax site take down, get lots of hits and ream in the ad revenue from visits when hosted again :)
Here is an bit of propa^H^H^H^H^Hnews about the takedown: http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=6 6667
/U.S. Newswire/ -- Swedish authorities announced today that they have shut down "The Pirate Bay" -- one of the world's largest and most well known facilitators of online piracy. With more than one million registered users, "The Pirate Bay" touts itself as the "World's Largest BitTorrent Tracker" facilitating and enabling illegal swapping of millions of illegal copyrighted movies, music, software, and games. The operators of "The Pirate Bay" have publicly ridiculed copyright holders and taunted law enforcement for years claiming immunity to copyright laws. Since filing a criminal complaint in Sweden in November 2004, the film industry has worked vigorously with Swedish and U.S. government officials in Sweden to shut this illegal site down. Over 50 Swedish law enforcement officials executed search warrants and raids at 10 different locations which resulted in three arrests and the preclusion of millions of users trading up to 2 million illegal files simultaneously.
The **AA are all patting themselves on the back and talking about the billions of dollars they lost to piracy last year.
For those too lazy to click, here is the text:
To: National Desk
Contact: Kori Bernards or Elizabeth Kaltman, 818-995-6600, both of MPAA Los Angeles; John Feehery or Gayle Osterberg, 202-293-1966, both of MPAA Washington, D.C.
LOS ANGELES, May 31
"The actions today taken in Sweden serve as a reminder to pirates all over the world that there are no safe harbors for Internet copyright thieves," said Chairman and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) Dan Glickman. "Intellectual property theft is a problem for film industries all over the world and we are glad that the local government in Sweden has helped stop 'The Pirate Bay' from continuing to enable rampant copyright theft on the Internet."
ThePirateBay.com is a so called pirate "tracker" that directs people to pirated movies and music, making available over 157,000 illegal files including the latest blockbuster releases such as Da Vinci Code, Mission Impossible: III, and The Poseidon Adventure and many others. The Pirate Bay's takedown today represents a growing culture of respect for intellectual property in Sweden, which in July 2005 reformed its copyright law to address digital piracy. Various rights-holders have sent countless cease-and-desist letters to The Pirate Bay, requesting that its operators remove pirated content from the site, and have been met with mockery and scorn, such as the operators posting the letters and their replies on ThePirateBay.com.
According to Alexa.com, which rates millions of Web sites around the world, "The Pirate Bay" was the 479th most visited Web site in the world, ranking 21st in Sweden and 312th in the U.S. In comparison, CNN.com is the 125th most popular site in Sweden.
Like many pirate Web sites, "The Pirate Bay" contains significant and lucrative third-party advertising, much of it promoting the porn industry. Advertising revenue is typically a function of number of unique site visits per day. With more than one million hits per day, "The Pirate Bay" takes in an estimated $60,000 per month from advertisers in addition to thousands of dollars collected from user "donations."
"The bottom line is that the operators of the Pirate Bay and others like them are criminals who profit handsomely by facilitating the distribution of millions of copyrighted creative works and files protected under the law," said John G. Malcolm, executive vice president and director of Worldwide Anti-Piracy Operations for the MPAA. "We applaud Swedish law enforcement for their effort to stop egregious copyright infringement on The Pirate Bay."
The major motion picture studios lost an estimated $6.1 billion to piracy in 2005. Internet piracy alone cost the studios $2.3 bill
Drinking habits can be dangerous. You can choke on the cloth and the nuns will wonder where their clothes are.
Given that much art found in museums is old enough to be public domain, your suggestion sounds like an excellent idea for getting some classics in my home.
Of course, there would be the spread of culture that you'd have to live with, but it's a small price to pay for making the apartment look nice.
http://piratbyran.blogspot.com/ - Has an official pressrelease from the guys behind the pirate bay, the pressrelease is in swedish, if you want to read my english translation, then go to http://piratbyran-in-eng.blogspot.com/ I am sorry if this comment is wrong in some way, my first time posting here on Slshdt. Thanks!
Ewww, talk about a misleading headline by luddites, Matt Drudge is a hypocrite and should be banned for continually misleading the public with these types of technically incompetent news headlines. This guy is famous for bias and this just proves the mentality or lack there of. I wish people would see through these blattering mouthpieces.
0 060531
http://www.drudgereport.com/
"Swedish Police Shut Down worlds largest file sharing company..."
http://www.thelocal.se/article.php?ID=3955&date=2
I just relized by writing about this, I've provided free advertising to his site. OOPS
So without the pirate bay, what's the best tracker/index left?
... will need to stand fast against the steamrollers of evil
sadly, it seems most first worlders are on the wrong side
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/12/28/0
Erik Dalén
The Pirate Bay, could not be closed if not directly agreed by swedish governent, cause they have not broken against any Swedish laws. Sweden is a "banana republic" when it comes to law enforcement ...
For direct Linux CD downloads, try http://linuxiso.org/ and for torrents try http://linuxtracker.org/ There are others. Many others.
Meh.
SVT, the national publicly-funded television broadcaster in Sweden, claims the following:
"Enligt källor till SVT har USA utövat påtryckningar mot svenska politiker, som i sin tur uppmanat polisen att agera."
Roughly translated to English:
"According to SVT's sources, the USA have pressured Swedish politicians, who in turn have requested that the police should act."
IANAL, but I thought it was illegal for Swedish politicians to influence police, courts etc. in specific cases. It is called "ministerstyre" (ministry's ruling?), and is illegal in order to prevent corruption.
Anyone else think that this might be MPAA/RIAA bribing the Swedish police to raid their servers and then turn over the logs so that they have tens, perhaps hundreds, of thousands of American IPs to track down? Then, using their enormous lawyer repertoire, sue a bajillion people into poverty via mass settlements?
I would -not- be surprised. MPAA/RIAA are predator organisms in the big scheme of things, sort of like gelatinous cubes. They're huge, they're always hungry, and they have the resources to get that food. They see that somebody in the Swedish police can be bribed. They have found the food trail.
They take that opportunity and bribe the right people. They're told to nab the servers of Pirate Bay and then turn over the logs. Using these logs, they now know many more locations of tasty prey to be consumed.
It's not that outlandish when you think about their track record.
In Sweden, .torrent files are not a violation of copyright law, and hosting a tracker is legal. But there are still copyright laws. This means that if the folks behind the Pirate Bay are only tracking and hosting .torrents, then they are in safe water. But if the police uncover any evidence during the raid that the Pirate Bay folks actually downloaded any copyrighted files, then they could get in trouble. If one of the founders downloaded a torrent and then seeded it (even if just for personal use), then the police could make the case that they were also distributing copyrighted materials, and that would be illegal.
#include ".signature"
Usually I don't think much of one issue parties, however I feel that in western democracies the whole discussion on "intellectual property" in all its forms is a crucial one. If it continues to go this way, without counterforces, our democracy is soon dead and replaced by nightmares as depicted in books like 1984. Those that have a "moderate" position forget that the proponents are pushing so hard, advocating such draconic measures and accepting all kind of "collateral damage" that a moderate position is no option.
The only answer is: radical opposition, smash the concept of intellectual property.
Good point, succintly made.
They obviously mean things like the news on your country's latest genocide or human rights injustice. Only an idiot would assume it means music, movies and games.
By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
I use www.isohunt.com for my questionable activities. CBCs The National had an interview with the owner isohunt last night. He gave his two cents on the whole bittorrent thing and details on the MPAA trying to sue him. www.cbc.ca/national for all those interested (until 11pm Eastern time 31/05/06). Realplayer is required (the interview is about half way through the broadcast).
Swedish police are censoring political websites: "...a political attack against a perfectly legitimate political web site, initiated by a non-democratic, corporate interest organisation, effected by the police. Does this sound like something that would happen in Cuba or in China? No, it happened in Sweden..."
"Last year, Sweden banned the downloading of copyright material after being singled out for criticism by Hollywood. The issue of file sharing and copyright has been emotive in Sweden, a hi-tech country with a tradition of openness." See Reuters Link
The bikini - security through obscurity since 1943
If you actually think commercial companies would benifit from an abolished copyright, you're crazy. The very next *day* people would be out on the street corner selling CDR's with just about every imaginable piece of useful commercial software in exsistance. The GPL would really cease to matter, because free software would be the only thing left standing.
As much as I hate the extended copyrights, trademarks, and patient laws on the books, they are nessesary for commercial software to exsist.
Wow.... I'm sure the nerds at the pirate bay can pwn the hell out of people in CS... But in reality i don't think they have the weaponry or fitness. Seriously, There was probably one person in the building. He must have shit his pants, reading a slashdot article and then *poof* 50cops. I sincerely hope it was like a swat team and they broke in through windows. Where they could have you know ... sent an e-mail to have the place shut down.
The point wasn't that Government should develop a vaccine (or do research in general), but that they should FUND it. Which, indeed, they already do. (And that the result of the publicly funded research should be... public)
http://wiredfire.org/index.php?q=node/63 Who knows what will happen I just hope that it comes back up soon
These guys crack me the hell up. Sorry, but if this is how poorly our #$%^%@ing Legislators understand the law, casual /. readers can be forgiven.
I'm not siding with the view that infringement == theft.. just answering "How many times do you morons have to be told?" with "Lots more. Lots"
My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
I love TPB
...in case the guy thinks about suing me for libel. John Cornyn being a moron is only one possible explanation of why he says a bunch of false, stupid things. I consider it one of the most likely. But I admit there might be some other reason (e.g. he's a liar, he's a genius pretending to be a moron, etc.)
My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
My thoughts from http://foolip.org/blog/2006/05/31/hoping-for-the-w orst/
I just learned that The Pirate Bay and Piratbyrån were raided today. I don't know much about what's happened, but I really do hope that things have been handled very poorly. I hope that the allegations made by SVT that this was triggered by pressure from America are true and that it will cause public outrage. If Thomas Bodström is somehow involved (unlikely perhaps), that would be absolutely superb too.
Why do I hope for the worst? Because I want this to become a topic of fierce political debate so that it will be very clear who is a friend and who is an enemy in the upcoming Swedish election. It's been clear for a long time that none of the big parties are friends, but perhaps this will force some of them to make sensible decisions and become more friendly (look at what's happening in France, it's not impossible). I don't know if the recently formed Pirate Party are sane, but hopefully they'll be given a chance to present their views in the debate that will now follow.
The last time there was some debate about copyrights (when Sweden changed the copyright legislation to conform with EUCD last summer) I discussed and thought about these issues quite a bit. I arrived at the conclusion that copyright probably shouldn't be abolished all together, but that some of the following might be good ideas.
* Shorten the copyright term to something between 5 and 20 years.
* Allow all non-commercial distribution use of works covered by copyright. If the copyright term is very short, this may not actually be necessary. Conversely, with a long term it might be useful to allow even more non-commercial uses (e.g. sampling music or re-editing bad movies).
* Disallow distribution of works which have not been published. The idea is that a creator should have the authority to stop distribution of copies that have been physically stolen or otherwise leaked before they are completed an published. Without this, I think it would be legal to publish someones private letters or photos without permission, and that wouldn't be cool.
Why does it matter? I have a vision that my children will be able to access a wikipedia-like database of all culture that has been produced in human history, with high technical quality and instant access. It's much too hard for to find works of culture these days, at least works that are a few years old. If you have access to a warez top-site you might be able to get anything you want, but it's only for a small elite.
Why are we locking away old culture that no longer makes money for anyone? The works that do make money long after they were created are the ones that were very popular to begin with and don't need a long copyright term. Some people want to make piles of money from The Beatles even though half of The Bealtes are already dead! I want everyone to be able to hear The Beatles at will. Copyright is not given by nature, it's a political tool and we should use it as we see fit to get the results we want. This is the information age, and with the proper legal framework in place we could reach the point where quality culture is a commons, not something for economic and technical elites.
Of course you could tell the Swedish Police http://www.polisen.se/inter/nodeid=10272&pageversi on=1.html just what you think about this...
Anyone want to call the MPAA and ask how much 50 Swedish Policemen cost?
nt
It is not Pirates vs Ninjas, more like Pirates vs clods, but the clods have a steamroller and a lot of morons to push it.
-Charlie
Note to potential sibling posters:
This man is obviously a troll or an idiot. In either case, please ignore him.
vi ~/.emacs # I'm probably going to Hell for this.
Hey there, Sheeple #83028402822398. Here's a thought: get a REAL job. If you dance with the Devil then eventually you're going to have to pay up (see Charlie Daniels Band). I want you to give me one good reason why any artist, any musician, any sports player should be paid for what they do...I'm waiting...still waiting...fuck it, here you go: they shouldn't. These are natural talents, very different than using your brain (see Substance Abuse among the listed professions). If you make money utilizing your brain or natural talents, more power to you. However, NO ONE is entitled to ANYTHING in this world, don't believe the hype. Others pay these workers to use their talents. If there was no demand, there would be no money. I think you've got it backwards...
Sweden, until rather recently, had one of the more enlightened copyright laws around. It explicitly required authorisation only for *commercial* reproduction. Making a copy of a cd, book, or whatever and giving it to your friends was never illegal.
You're misinformed. Yes, you were allowed to give your closest friends a copy. There was a levy fee on the media because of it though. And you couldn't give ALL your friends a copy (disregard the typical slashdotter with 6 friends).
If you spread copies widely earlier, it was just as illegal as it is now
I have a really elegant proof for Fermat's last theorem. If this sig was only a bit longer...
Still a bit off... I'll try:
Through its size and expressed goal of exposing and taunting the affected creators, The Pirate Bay was made famous all over the world.
For the first time in more than 20 years, I am now a member of a political party. I went to http://www.piratpartiet.se/, followed the instructions and presto, I'm a member. I wouldn't normally support such a party, but things are not normal when Sweden is turning into China.
the first customer could then copy his copy and spread it across the whole, wide world.
Thus no threat to openness.
http://www.antipiratbyran.se/
Short summary of what it say:
The newspaper article is about someone getting caught with drugs and got a 12000SEK fine
(that equals rougly about $1600)
Driving a car while under the influence of drugs = 12000SEK(about $1600)
Sharing the movie Hipp Hipp Hora (The Ketchup Effect) = 16000SEK(about $2100)
WHYYYYYYYYY!?!?
Thats about it.
Also at the top it says "Välkommen till Internet, det är vi som har kontrollen här."
"Welcome to the internet, it is us that got the control here."
Actually, I joined the pirate party today because of this depressing trend. Apparently I'm not the only one, since the number of members stated on their home page is ticking up at a steady rate.
... Can I change my answer on this weeks poll?
So it seems that Swedish law would be on Thepiratebay's side? It seems from reading that Swedish law frowns upon them raiding and taking down non offending sites... http://youareapiratebay.ytmnd.com/
Do I come to your house and try to take YOUR photons away? I paid for the 110V line that powered the Internet connection that got me my Bette Davis collection. So hands off.
A friend told me there was interesting discussion here.
So, I came back after an enormous hiatus. What I find is appalling.
He said interesting comments started around #100 in this article. However, when I click to go to page 2, it looks the same as page 1. Page 3, too. I think it changes, finally, at page 4, after having skipped 100 or 150 messages, where the "good stuff" was.
Is Slashdot censoring?
Not only will they not deserve liberty or safety, Mr. Franklin, they will be DENIED both!
While the traffic level has seemingly fallen quite a bit on the "Weekly" graph, the levels are consistent with the amount of traffic seen two weeks ago (see graph "monthly").
While it is clear that TPB has had a large amount of traffic and the graph has taken a large dive, it is not logical to conclude that the entire difference is attributed to TPB.
The police watch TV too! Do you think they're going to cut off a major supply of TV shows during the on-season? ;-P
I for one hope that this only turns into an opportunity to strengthen the PB. It looks like they are still accepting donations at http://www2.piratpartiet.se/
More importantly - support PB financially and publicly with Apparel! As I understand it, most of the profit from this store goes to the PB.
ôó
This argument drives me nuts. They're not selling you the paper on which the book was printed. They are selling you the entertainment/knowledge/whatever you derive from the content of the book. The lost sales argument aside, this is the problem I have with any music/movie pirates who justify it the way you did. "Well, I wouldn't buy that shit anyway, and I just made a copy, I didn't physically deprive them of anything." Well, 1) How pathetic must you be to waste your time downloading shit you don't value? Either that or you're lying, and enjoy getting something for free. And 2) If you delete a bunch of vital information on a company's server, would you use the defense that "I didn't physically destroy anything, I just realigned some bits on a hard drive"?
I am a college student, with depleted financial resources. I do not wish to spend money on a product, unless I find it useful/enjoyable. I am a pirate. I pirate movies, programs, and music. Everything I dislike will be deleted in under a month, because I cannot waste storage space on my hard drive. Everything I find highly useful, I buy. In the end, I buy more then my "streight-edge" friends. I own a legal copy of dreamweaver and flash - something I always scoffed at, but once using I fell in love.
All of my DVD's were once pireted, and I now own all of my favorites (40 titles... Who needs food with all of the LOtR Special edition...) I even own porn on DVD, ones that I found myself watching again and again. (I dream of Jenna, DDDTR, DDD2000, Space nuts) And for music, I try an artist before I buy, I probably would never of bought half of the bands in my collecton without trying them first. I even pirated pages and keynotes, and after finding how easy and eye-catching they made my presintations, I ended up buying them (If I could of bought keynotes alone, I would of. I find LaTEX a better tool for reports.)
So, when it comes to "downloading shit I don't value", but that I hear lots of good things about, I end up trying before I buy. I want the product to earn my money. If you could of tried a disapointing game? Stopped yourself before selling 18 bucks to see "The Time Machine" in theaters, wouldn't you? Before picking up the new Opeth cd, only to discover it a steaming pile? Pirating thins the heard of bad movies, music, games, and software. In the end, a pirate develops a form of brand loyalty, and stays with a good product, buying it, and recomending it to co-workers. Pirates do not "waste" time downloading something they may not want: they are simply giving it a chance to be bought in the end. Does that not lead one to spend money where one would normally not? Does that not actually improve the earnings of the companies whos products you "stole"? Since Napster and the like, I have bought more music then I ever did before.
In the end, the only ones that do not get my money are those with truely horrid products. Rehashed movies, poor plots and forced acting in a movie, lackluster games, and sloppy software. Not to mention all of those pop bands that all sound the same. Explain to me how you can wate you money on seeing these? How can you waste you money on buying these?
3 degrees of separation from Vladimir Putin
Isn't that what Barnes & Noble does - letting customers sit in the store and read the books for free? We don't have B&N anywhere near where I live, but I read that somewhere. I think it was an article by Cory Doctorow.
If you get this, we're 10 of a kind.
The real tragedy in this mess is all the clients of ISP PRQ that got their servers raided too. The police simply raided the PRQ colocation facility that hosts TPB and 100 other servers. They had a search warrant for everything in the PRQ facilities, so they took down all computers. This is the biggest tragedy in this mess imo.
Just because the same people own the ISP PRQ as TPB it should not mean that everything in PRQs facilities gets stolen by the police in a raid. It makes a lot of problems for a lot of small business and private persons - people that are not connected to TPB. It might be years until they get their computers back.
I expect this huge blunder and anti-free-speech act from the police to become big in the media here tomorrow.. If not it is a real shame and a tragedy.
'cause it's really truthy.
People pirate stuff because they want to, not because they have to. If they need Photoshop but can't pay for it, and don't want to buy Elements or anything else, they'll pirate it. Afterwards they'll justify how they need the 'standard' software, but they clearly don't because they're not learning graphic art (else they'd buy PS at the edu. price) and they're not earning from it (else they'd be able to afford it).
People just want stuff for free and because there's almost zero chance of being caught, they feel empowered to just pirate stuff.
Justification is just so much hot air. We all know it's crap, but some people still insist on producing lots of verbage when they should just say "I wanted it and I didn't want to pay for it."
Thanks to pirates, we've got copy protection and DRM. Thanks guys! Love your work!
I suspect with Disney's new movie http://disney.go.com/disneypictures/pirates/
to be released soon they needed stop any Priate(tm) trademark dilution.
Atleast they havent shut down isohunt yet:)
The legal threats often made references to US copyright law, as if it was directly applicable to The Pirate Bay. Such claims were justifiably ridiculed, but that does not mean that US copyrights can be willfully infringed in Sweden within consequences. Sweden is a signatory of the Berne Convention, which is reflected by Swedish laws protecting copyrights of domestic and foreign works. Those laws are actually part of the criminal code, which has general provisions for making "contributory X" a crime if "X" is a crime. Distributing torrent files and running a tracker may not constitute direct copyright infringement, but may well be regarded as contributory infringement, especially if perpetrator is informed of the infringement but still continues contributing to it. The legal correspondance page of The Pirate Bay may thus be used as evidence of willful contributory infringement.
How about I come into your house, copy everything -- photos, licenses, floor plan, VIN numbers, you name it, and leave, leaving everything as it was. Have I harmed you in any way? No? Then why do they always call the cops on me? Some say it's against the law. I say, whose law! Whose law!
They call the cops because you got caught, why do you think. If you're going to do that, don't get caught.
Don't leave any witnesses (wink)
I work for a small web-based company that makes 3rd-party addon packages for MS Flight Sim. We don't have much overhead, profit margin, advertising, or a massive distribution network. You go to our website, you buy the plane, download the file and the key, and we hope you tell your friends if it's good.
For a while now, every time we release a new plane or addon, it's almost instantly up on that website. One of the recent ones, our G.55 Veltro, flopped completely. Why? Because nobody bothered paying us $20 when they could download it for free over there.
That $20 isn't going to some huge multi-million dollar publisher that has dozens of boxes on thousands of store shelves. It comes right back and pays our bills, buys our food and keeps the roof over our heads.
I don't have an issue with copyright and fair use reform. There's plenty of things that really do need fixes. This son of a bitch, though, didn't even try to differentiate between massive companies that milk and exploit the system and those that honestly depend on it to protect their rightful property and business. He was just out to get his rocks off by playing pirate, hiding behind the complexities of international law, and taunting people who told him to stop illegaly mass-distributing their property.
As far as I'm concerned, he and everybody else who ran that site can die in a jokulhlaup.
1. boycott movies--it would take but a few months/year before RIAA would change their minds about sites like piratebay.
2. independant motion pictures, maybe could release copyright free materials if they want. why don't you be the first to do this? (i read that china actually lost their movie industry as a result of lack of copyright protection due to blatent copying of new films, which immediately went to $1 vcds across the street from the theaters in which they were released--but you know this might not be true cause and effect).
3. start the worlds first pirate SHIP, where our servers go out to sea on a boat and use satellite--no govt. interference (ok, docking could be tough).
I wouldn't be in the least bit surprised if the Pirate Bay comes back up tomorrow, as version 2.0. Of course, there is no way you could BUY this much publicity, and the MPAA would have quite a bit of egg on it's face for publishing a crowing "Press Release" on the issue.
So, patience. Wait and see. June 2nd will tell if this is real or not. June 1st is a day of political satire, jokes, speech making, and such.
In the meantime, the poor servers have a rest from serving torrents
"Don't worry about the problems you have in mathematics, I assure you mine are much greater." - Einstein c.1919
There are hundreds of torrent sites on the internet. The MPAA only has the power to tackle the major torrent sites. By shutting down the major torrent sites, the smaller ones will simply become bigger, as more people will begin posting their torrents onto those sites.
Given that it's not one entity (Illuminati aside), "oligopoly" might be a more accurate and defensible characterization.
We now return to your regularly scheduled flamewar....
//Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
Wow!! I always thought the Nazis were German...
f ).
:)
Even here in the United States where it seems that our politicians have sold us out to the MPAA, that wouldn't be allowed to happen. Police would have to get a court ordered injunction to take down a web site for a business interest like that. And they would be subject to criminal prosecution if they were doing it to stifle political speech. I thought Sweden was more reasonable than here.
Also, here in the United States when the police execute a search warrant they can make a copy of the files on the server, but they can't just pack the server up and walk away. That's insane. I think Sweden really does need a new political party.
Like an earlier poster, my favorite section of the site was the responses to MPAA/RIAA fools and their lackeys (i.e. the attorneys of many lands). I really liked their in-your-face attitude and the willingness to point out that any demand based on U.S. law -- twisted and distorted by the MPAA -- has no meaning in Sweden. The idiotic gloating of the MPAA fools just adds insult to injury (http://www.mpaa.org/press_releases/2006_05_31.pd
I hope the Pirate Bay folks sue the people who took their servers. In the United States that could include abuse of the color of law, trespassing, theft, tortious interference with business, etc. -- or the closest equivalent in Sweden.
Interestingly enough, under Sweden's copyright laws the content of the Pirate Bay web sites (i.e. databases of information) would be eligible for copyright protection, but it would not be eligible for similar protection here in the United States -- our copyright laws don't afford the same protection to databases of factual information as to fictional or creative works. That's something to keep in mind, since Pirate Bay could probably sue the people who took their servers for theft of copyright protected materials. Maybe they could even find a few decent lawyers in their mail to file the suit here in the United States.
Sweden needs some free speech advocates. Maybe they should run under the name of "Freedom Party" or something similar.
Listen guys, we can squabble here all day long about how wrong this is and how messed up copyright laws have become. The truth is that none of this matters, the **AA's will do whatever they want because the have MONEY. They have the power to make things like this happen. It's so funny that Americans are so concerned about what's happening overseas, it's like we've completely given up on impacting US copyright laws. The people deciding on passing these laws aren't the most qualified to deal with these issues.
they just updated their servers and had a little fun with the community while doing it. the site is back online with a new look.
According to the Swedish newssite idg.se: Swedish internet bandwith usage have dropped from a avrage 30gb to 22gb .. This must mean that there is less pirates active out there today than yesterday.
p g
.. anyone ??
I also noticed that the temprature is way below avrage for this time of the year here in Sweden (9'c compared to 15'c (48'f compared to 59'f)).
How does this match the FSM piratechart http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Pirateschart.j
Pls help, i feel confused
According to Wikipedia: ... may also be used to denote the entire populations of these countries [Norway, Iceland, Denmark and Sweden] and their settlements elsewhere."
"The term Viking
A minority of examples should not hold the majority of people hostage with overly long copyrights. I say a decade is good. Five years too short and 40-50 years way too long - works tend to become culturally irrevelent by then.
Holding them hostage... to what? Paying too much for a DVD? Avoiding building a new movie that uses clips from the old one? I don't see that as such a great gaping hole in the creative world (and parody is still protected). No, I don't want to suppress those kinds of works needlessly, but in many cases the need exists -- more on that below.
George Lucas can make his new Starwars. He just can't rake in the cash for the old ones forever.
That's fine for George Lucas. Obviously he can afford it. And you are saying he's the "norm" among artists and content creators, presumably.
And Rowling would still have economic incentive (actually, even more so) to make Harry Potter books. So I don't see your point.
Good lord, you're pointing to the wealthiest woman in the world, and the wealthiest author ever, as the example we should judge by? Remember how you said "a minority of examples should not hold the majority of people hostage"? Rowling is in a tiny, tiny minority among authors. She's in a set of ONE.
Also, try moving even slightly out of the mainstream pap-for-the-masses creative work. Do you think *most* bands are like the ones you see on TV? They aren't. Yes, the music industry is messed up, but more because the money goes to the wrong people, not because we need to remove most of that money entirely.
Most publishing houses, in the *current* world of very-very-long copyright, only publish literary fiction and niche-interest work to build up their reputation and hope for the occasional breakout. They sell it at a loss, even over the long term. And don't forget that when they give "big" advances to authors... well, even a half million bucks in payment for a work that took, say 6 years, is only $83K/year before taxes, with no benefits or guarantee of future income. Not chump change, but no jackpot either (and again, that's way out of the realm of "normal" writers ).
Don't just look at the ridiculous extremes when you're arguing for a system that would affect so many other people.
The police really went overboard this time, not only did they take the TPB and Piratbyrån servers, they basically took everything else too. I have some friends whose PRQ (TPB's ISP) services dont work anymore.
From http://www.istheshit.net/: It has been confirmed by our hosting company that the police took our server in the raid, we hope the server doesn't get molested by the police. FYI: istheshit.net isn't illegal in any way, the police removed ALL servers found in the same building as The Pirate Bay. There's some angry co-location customers right now, including us.
(From a Brit. currently living in Sweden) The biggest complaint from most of the Swedish public seems not to be with the morality or legality of what Pirate Bay is doing, but is with the gross waste of public funds being used to pursue a largely unimportant civil crime for which the maximum penalty is only a fine with no possibility of prison. The police in Sweden do not normally get involved in pursuing this type of case leaving it up to the aggrieved party (in this case the Record and Film companies) to bring this up before a civil court themselves. People in Sweden are mighty pissed off that their taxes are being used in this way.
v isa/0,1937,20844,00.html
Aftonbladet (one of Sweden's biggest newspapers) has an interesting survey on their website asking "Is it right that the police should crack down on file sharers?"...
http://www.aftonbladet.se/vss/special/storfragan/
Currently over 50,000 votes have been cast and it's roughly 16%-yes and 84%-no.
Or 78 to shut down a 1-man peace protest
http://www.mpaa.org/press_releases/2006_05_31.pdf
mpaa claims responsibility
*Disclaimer*
...
This is my view point, my opinion. If you disagree, that's fine, 'cos you're entitled to YOUR opinion.
*/Diclaimer*
It feels to me like the MPAA/RIAA/DMCA (and others, hereon reffered to as *A*), are there to make money. They are in the business of protecting copyright laws. (My view, remember?)
But the horse has already bolted.
They are quick to come out against new technologies, as it's easier to get large court settlements. Remember Napster? This looks like the same thing all over again. Ok, now the technology has changed somewhat. But the basic principal is still there, just TPB is like a information directory, informing you where to get what you want. TPB in my mind, cannot be held liable for the legitimacy of the source. (I think they may have even had a disclaimer to that effect, but I can't remember, and the site's not up to check)
In my opinion (and I know nothing of Swedish law, just what's posted here) the *A* are not going to get anything out of this, but bad press. TPB are not controlling what users post, so *A* should be taking issue with the users, not with the site! Why aren't *A* taking legal action against google? huh? Google index SOO many torrents and torrent trackers!! And I believe they are a US based company.
Should the *A* be successful with legal action against TPB, there will be mass seizures of hardware from numerous other sites, and I believe they will deal a devasting blow to the P2P community. But as history shows, that will be counter-acted by something else, maybe a new technology or a new network.
Yeah, so maybe *A* get a strangle hold on torrents? Cool. What next? eDonkey? News servers? IRC?
I think *A* are trying to play catch up, but are just too slow!!
OK, so that's my 2c
Don't get me wrong, infringing copyright is illegal, and action must still be taken. I just think that *A* are misguided and need to target the cause, and not the effect!!
PS, I'd like to congratulate the Swedish police for making TPB famous, and Pirate Party too.
There's all this confusion about this Copyright law... The media companies made it sound like it's a way of limiting your rights, but it was created with the intent of creating more diversity in content by limiting the rights of the content distributors. In fact it used to have clauses which ensured the consumer's rights wouldn't be stifled (such as fair use). Why was copyright law created?? Because with the invention of the printing press things could be mass replicated much easier, the idea behind copyright was to limit who could print/sell stuff, taking power from printing press/distributor and giving it back to content creator, to allow people to create and distribute new content instead of letting the printing press have a field day selling us the same old crap making huge profits. Copyright law was created so that the content creator would be properly compensated. So that the consumer wouldn't be subjected to the same crap over and over again with no new works being created.
The copyright law was made to protect the content creator and the content user. The copyright law was created to stifle the content distribution companies like MPAA, not the consumer. I don't know when this changed, but whoever had the wonderful idea of copyright would probably jam a sharp stick in his eyes if he saw what crud the content distributors have turned this law into.
The copyright law has obviously failed in the past half a century and content distributors have too much power now. It's time for another copyright law with the original intent of protecting the consumer and the content creator and to make sure media conglomerates like MPAA don't make huge profits from nothing.
There's no reason why a CD should cost $20 (and only a dime going to the creator) when the manufacturing cost of CD is in pennies... just my two cents. Sharing is caring. Let's try to put an end to the tyrannical misuse of copyright law. Thanks for reading!
Blockquoth the AC:
I suspect you're right that they're suboptimal. The question is whether we can find a viable and superior alternative that takes advantage of the mass-distribution possibilities we have today without taking away fair recognition and compensation for artists and thus reducing the incentive to create and share new work that today's intellectual property framework provides.
I think this is one of the most interesting questions of our day. Ideas like micropayments for web page views have potential here, for example. But right now, I don't think anyone's close enough to a better alternative to justify scrapping/ignoring the existing IP framework.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
I might be missing it, but what specifically is your complaint about Drudge on this one? There's plenty of bad things about Drudge, but in this case it seems like he got that from the headline of the original article - the only embellishment I see to the original headline was the bit about it being the world's largest.
You're the dude what missed the point. The point of the GPL is to not allow the sources to be closed off. It has nothing to do with the binary. Someone could sell a binary with a secret key and only take support calls for a single IP address ... copies would be useless. The GPL prevents that.
Infuriate left and right
Well, maybe the cops arrest you because you are a fucking moron, or because you were breaking & entering another persons home.
// instant - "I for one welcome our new Decaff Coffee-Flavoured-Coffee Overlords"
From my viewpoint the party was started by "just a bunch of friends", none of which I can remember even posting on Piratbyrån's forums.
I could tell you which cool-for-its-time 80's dial-up mail network the bunch of friends came from, but you wouldn't believe me.
Stealing is allowed in Hollywood if it benefits the movie and record studios. Ask any playwright or artist whose work they ripped off then hid behind "copyrights".
The antics of the RIAA & MPAA (lapdog of deep pockets movie & record label legal mafia cartels) are to be expected. A monkey will always act as a monkey. I don't know who the Real Pirates are. PB or Movie and Record cartels. An industry that told Thomas Edison to bugger off, we aint paying no stinking royalties to you for your phonograph and movie patents. They stole his idea, moved to Hollywood a hundred years ago and have infested it ever since.
Who is the bigger Pirate? PB or a Record Cartel that grosses $15 million USD for a million selling album then hands the artists a paltry $300,000 or so before taxes. $15,000,000 gross minus $500,000 to press the cds. $11 million or so profit after expenses into the Record Cartel pockets and shite to the artists.
Who is the Pirate?? They make me laugh. Ohhhh.... we are losing money. Well promote real talent instead of bollocks then maybe people will pay for it.
A tragedy, a tragedy, it is terrible. I did not slept through all the night long. It is just terrible. Just terrible the moral damage it has been caused on me. Hope some light will open on our tragic situation.
Come home, man.
* A major swedish news agency claims the operation to shut down TPB was initiated by high-level political pressure from the USA. Supposedly the swedish justice department then put pressure on law enforcement agencies to shut down TPB even though previous investigations have shown TPB to be compliant with swedish law. This obviously violates the constitution and could potentially create a lot of problems for the justice department and its head Thomas Bodström. Many of the major media sites have now made these allegations their top story. * The homepage of the swedish police (polisen.se) is currently inaccessible, most likely due to a DoS type attack.
if I sell other (but better) music at cheaper prices, I am also stealing his market, which is equivalent to theft. Wrong, sorry. Stealing someone's market is not a criminal act, per se.
It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
And the Swedish national police site is still down (since last night) due to repeated DoS attacks, just a day after the police raided piratebay.org, seized all their servers as well as all other servers in the same storage area (including shutting down 10-20 commercial companies whose web sites went offline).
Meanwhile, the Minister of Justice (Attorney General [US]) of Sweden, Thomas Bodström, is facing a hearing in front of a committee for his alleged involvement in shutting the site down as a direct result of a request from MPAA and US authorities.
There is currently a voting going on with largest Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet (The Evning Post), on whether the pirate bay site or the national police's site will be up and running first. So far, 25,000 people have voted, and 93% think that Pirate Bay will be operational first.
Hej you Norwegian mountain troll Please read up on your Nordic history - Norwegian history books are full of errors because Snorre Sturlison got too drunk one night and claimed that Norwegians were the true Vikings. Facts are 1) Viking capitals were a) Roskilde in Denmark and b) Birka in Sweden 2) First Norwegian King was a Dane ;-)
3) Danish Viking conquored America, Greenland, Paris, England, Baltics, the Swedes conqoured Russia, Finland. (There are local Rune supporting this all over)
Norwegian vikings really did very little - you had the chances, but chose to stay in the small cities by the coast. Which is understandable, because they are nice, and the girls are REALLY pretty. But the fact that Norwegians were and still are taught they were Vikings is a misunderstanding introduced by a confused Snorre. Sorry.
They stick the DRM in your head when you are born.
You will never be able to see anything they do not want you to, never be able to repeat an experience without paying them for it, and will never know a life any differently--and (considering you have DRM in your head) maybe you would never even hear of a world any different.
Because my local library prominently features several photocopiers. Of course, also with a "don't be bad" notice on them, but you actually can photocopy an entire book and walk out with it if you want.
(Of course, since it costs like $.25 a page it'd usually be cheaper to just actually buy the book, but that's a different story...)
That might be okay.
If they can only keep ahold of their seeeeeecrets for five years anyway, and after that everything hits public domain (as i understand it, i know next to nothing about Swedish copyright law) i think that would not be too bad. At worst, any particular abuse can only last for five years. A long time, yes, but on the other hand: my own computer equipment is mostly > 5 years old and it does not bother me much at all.
To get the benefits i think i would be willing to pay the price.
(Assuming, of course, my understanding of the situation is acurate.)
... party raids YOU!
Libertas in infinitum
For five years.
No copyright does not mean "copyright holder has all power". Rather, the opposite: copyright means "copyright holder has all power" (even though it shouldn't).
"site down - will be up and fully functional within a day or two"
/. wouldn't let me post otherwise.
FWIW, those are the headlines (in all caps) on their site as of 3:53 AM GMT on June 3rd.
Had to convert to all lowercase because
Then the Microsoft software would also be BSD-licensed.
(At least, as i understand it.)