The Pirate Bay Comes To Facebook
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "According to a report I just read in Mashable, Pirate Bay is coming to Facebook. Writer Ben Parr says that The Pirate Bay site now includes links under torrents to 'Share on Facebook.' Once posted to a profile, the Facebook member's friends can click the link on Facebook to begin the download right away, provided he or she already has a torrenting client installed. I just hope people do not use this feature to download copyrighted materials which are not authorized to be downloaded, or at least not materials copyrighted to litigation-happy RIAA Big 4 record labels. No doubt, if their song files were downloaded through this method, the record companies would sit back for awhile, derive profit from the promotional excitement generated for their dying industry, and then — armed with Facebook's data — sue the pants off all the hapless Facebook users who fell for it."
Nothing in the .torrent file itself is illegal. The **AA still needs to actually show that the person was illictly downloading the copyrighted material. If I downloaded every .torrent on TPB for archival purposes, I would be doing nothing wrong.
I'm not against pirating, just against the drama that goes with it. I really don't want the RIAA on my ass; I'm sure facebook doesn't either.
I am waiting for the **IA to sue Facebook for "aiding piracy." That will be a fun one to watch.
My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
they have been loosing money from their lawsuits last time i checked the ##'s
(yes i know i suck at spelling fell free to correct my grammar and/or spellin i dont care, im still not going to change
Yep, I'll click on that link while logged in with my real name. I'm sure nothing bad will come out of this.
I just hope people do not use this feature to download copyrighted materials which are not authorized to be downloaded, or at least not materials copyrighted to litigation-happy RIAA Big 4 record labels.
Knowing the Internet community at large, I think there is probably no risk of this happening. :p
Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
What the *AAs are losing through piracy, more than sales and such, is control. The buzz "center" is moving from the old media into the piratebay's top100. Essentially. Such a development will eventually kill off the content-for-money industry (though a content-with-sponsoring may rise to take it's place, you'll notice that the TV industry is much more laid back).
This is a step in that direction, so look for a quick and angry reprisal, legally warranted or not.
The **AA will wait for facebook to generate that ever elusive revenue before it tries to sue them...
Take what ye can. Give nothing back!
"I just hope people do not use this feature to download copyrighted materials which are not authorized to be downloaded, or "
You one stupid mofo, nofo!
Oh, right, linux download. haha, you stupidier than I thought.
I always thought that the facebook link was a sort of civil disobedience type deal at worst, or at best, a humorous poke at how every site on the planet has Digg this, facebook this, mixx it, etc attached to every page generated.
Is it sad that I am more likely to recognize you and your posts by your sig than your name or UID?
Are you fucking joking or is this the best you can come up with in time for first post?
You are wrong.
You are full of shit.
You have no idea what you are talking about.
You have been modded up because slashdot moderators are wrong, full of shit, and have no idea what they are talking about.
Whenever you download a torrent, you must simultaneously upload it. This is required for .torrents to work.
That upload of copyrighted material is the fucking crime.
You fucking moron.
Your scheme of claiming that you were downloading materials for archival purposes or some other nonsense is total fucking bullshit. It is bound to fail, just like you.
I have an excuse ready to get out of any legal threats.
And no, I'm not posting it here.
Are you an idiot? Of course this is what it will be used for. It's the primary reason Pirate Bay exists, ripping off artists so that leeches don't have to pay for their work.
I'm so tired of the naive facade people put on when talking about P2P. We all know exactly what it's used for. Stop pretending you don't know.
If you're going to encourage people to screw someone over, screw over someone who can't defend themselves!
Fred has sent you a torrent. Download?
Send 20 more torrents to get a "FUCK THE RIAA" gift!
C'mon, gimme your best shot.
"In the absence of the ability to establish the attribute of truth they tried to establish the noble attributes."
I don't get it. The Pirate Bay launches a cheap, unlogged VPN in order to provide a more private service, but now they're encouraging sharing via Facebook?
You'd think that Facebook is the last place they'd want to be, since it just seems to be the complete antithesis of what I understood the Pirate Bay to be about.
'If Christ had tweeted the sermon on the mount, it might have lasted until nightfall.' - John Perry Barlow
Until the laws are changed to make downloading a torrent 'intent' to commit.
Then with that they have grounds for either a search warrant, or just grounds to sue outright.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I saw this a couple of days ago looking for a torrent ..
of a show I missed on discovery, and thought, kind of
interesting, everywhere else is adding bookmark this,
share that, so of course thepiratebay could become more
social
What is shared on TPB? A lot of content, its hard to
say that its mainly pirated, but of course HDTV shows
and any free software is probably indexed by it.
When I saw it I didn't think it'd be 'slashdot' worthy,
but it was peculiar, I'm sure that for pirates that use
facebook it is going to make sharing all the easier.
Block it? Thats utterly silly, I think it is a precedent,
maybe isohunt and mininova will add this feature, as they
seem to have larger communities that release their own
media through these portals.
If you're interested in facts I'll tell you what they are and I'll give you sources - Chomsky on The Big Idea
wtf am I missing? So, I used the Ubuntu example given by TorrentFreak (linked in the mashable article) and hit their Share on Facebook button. It posted to my FB profile as expected, but when I hit the link in my profile, it didn't start the download, it took me to the Pirate Bay page for the Ubuntu torrent. I have mutorrent installed... Is it just me? Maybe I need to tweek something to make the magic happen? Am I waiting for another FB redesign to go active? Or is the article completely wrong about this behavior, and then who really gives a fuck because I could have shared this on FB already through the Share on FB button I already have on my browser toolbar? (iow, this ain't news: Pirate Bay adding a link to a web page, whoopdeefuckingdoo).
If they ever had a firm case against pirate bay they'd be hitting them long time ago.
Luckily , here in EU our laws don't get created by monopoly companies .
To actually sue someone here (and TPB is EU portal) you actually need some hard evidence or you'll just waste a ton of money and publishers know that.
If we were in the US where every JonDoe can sniff your privacy and give it to court as "evidence" we'd already be in civil war or something.
kinda figured...that's why i asked for a link.
my kittens and ponies porno collection has become stale.
"You can kill the revolutionary, but you can't kill the revolution."-- Fred Hampton
Facebook has never given a crap about which apps run on it. They allow all sorts of apps on there that are nothing more than viral scams designed to steal user data. And, as a corporate machine, why wouldn't they? Every time one of those apps sends a message to a user, that user comes back to their site, might click on the invite friends link, and expand the facebook empire further.
Anyway... there's one good side to all this. Facebook is HUGE. Quite a big portion of the whole internet is using it, and if more of that portion starts using P2P, it pushes momentum in P2P users' favor, and away from big media's interests.
Piracy encourages you to be an artist, not a professional.
FYI, if you find yourself agreeing with the parent post, you probably have not ever read a Supreme Court or Appeals Court opinion, or decent law review article.
There are of course a number of frankly idiotic opinions, but on the whole judges (or at least good judges, i.e., the ones whose opinions you read in classes) are a fairly analytical bunch. You kind of have to be.
The impression I get when I ponder the relationship between the judiciary and the legislative branches is that we have a lot of well-educated, well-spoken judges trying to make sense of laws that have been cobbled together by a bunch of monkeys flinging poo at one another. It's a little depressing.
"Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
So many here are arguing legality, right, wrong, weather or not it'll fly in court...
It. Doesn't. MATTER.
The **AA can serve me with a lawsuit for raping the corpse of Pope John Paul II while wearing nothing but a purple party hat and pink woad.
It'd make a judge pop a vein from laughing so hard, but if I don't have a lawyer or can't afford one...
Then I'm shit outta luck and lose the lawsuit.
Remember, it's not how much justice you can get, it's how much justice you can afford. Or in the case of the **AA, it's how long you can hold out under sustained bombardment.
[End Of Line]
Although Facebook is the cancer of modern day society where idiots gather, i find what TPB are doing extremely amusing. This will catch on insanely fast in a short time unless Facebook buckles under pressure and removes it. (Which i foresee happening quite soon).
And do it on the post-modern narcissists' soapbox, the pulpit for the modern day lazy attention-whore, facebook.
Anybody who does this and then gets sued for it - well that's the elecronic equivalent of natural selection isn't it.
And you can bet your bottom dollar that facebook will remove this, esp. now they're a possible target with newscorp money to be had. They'll comply with anything the media corporations thrown at them as they have absolutely nothing to gain by fighting the good fight, so to speak. And they won't.
Besides this is not an issue of RIAA mafia tactics or innocent till proven guilty or even punishment does not fit crime, no loss in utility like caused by physical theft etc. - people are actively advertising their civil liability, whether you think that liability is fair or not.
And do we really have to rehash all this copyright != theft, fuck the RIAA etc. why don't we argue about the year of the linux desktop or in soviet russia whilst we're at it.
No I'm not new here :)
Another thought I've had, what if this is all part of the RIAA's strategy of going after BitTorrent?
1. Until now, out of 40,000 cases, not a single one has involved BitTorrent.
2. Every single case has involved Gnutella (e.g. LimeWire) or FastTrack (e.g. Kazaa).
3. Maybe this is the RIAA's way of finding a method of creating some new BitTorrent users, and catching them using Facebook's data.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
If it's on Facebook, it's sharing... not distributing.
An interesting potential point of view, and possibly within fair use rights? These aren't strangers you're giving out links to... they're friends. It's no different than emailing a link to a file to someone you know, or writing it down on a napkin at a coffee shop... it's sharing, not distribution.
Now with Facebook, RIAA would have to tackle the fair use scenario of friends sharing with friends. It could be a whole different story.
A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
This will come in handy as I release all my LEGAL self created media as torrents through Pirate Bay. It's an excellent tool to help promote independent artist's work.
Thanks Pirate Bay!
I say we must start a Facebook group where we decide to post our real identities fully open about it and if there's 1 million of us EACH of us SUES all of the others in some kind of Amicus Curae or Class Action *FOR* the xxAA.
With this dirty sue-fest we could make the headlines one every f00king newspaper about what the whole thing is about without even overstepping The Letter of The Law(TM).
So that The Law(TM) then realizes that it cannot afford to remain an ass and that the whole nation is laughing at it.
Unity of the people works in surprisingly effective ways. This will also send real shockwaves through the entire sue-happy f00kers in IT and all other industries, including dirty parasitism-only lawyers.
***
Totally civilized, totally legal, but openly demonstrating the most important thing about law - the letter of the law must always obey the spirit of the law - that the law is for man and not man for the law.
***
Start a Facebook group, get a million people behind it, make a cool set of widgets, buttons and what not, and start filing cases against each other.
You are free later, to make out of court settlements like at parties where you could celebrate the permanent death of the xxAA in this name and form.
All this can be typed out as such because you are not violating the letter of the law.
***
They might have surely kept a few laws with VERY LOOSE WORDING which allow me to sue you on THEIR behalf - this is a hack - and it is so crazy that almost surely, it will work.
***
Surely merits a little serious thought, given the ways laws are worded and chained to make a lethal combination to isolate individuals and attack by stealth.
HA. Tricked you!!! Early April Fools joke.
I hope unauthorized material is shared, without the consent of the creator.
First off, please get this right. All things are "copyrighted" immediately upon creation/composition/whatever, whether or not they wanted it to be, or so the law states. Secondly, you never know if someone has the consent of the copyright holder. It's perfectly legal for me to download a movie if the movie creator told me that I could, or if I have a "right" to do so as defined by law. Regardless of what the stupid law says (dumb DMCA, go to hell please) if you purchased a movie and want a backup or want to restore a lost disc or whatever it may be, that definitely should be completely legal, and there's no way for Facebook or any of those retards to know if your need is a "legitimate" one or not.
Regardless, everyone should keep sharing ideas and utilizing them to their full potential. Copyright and patent laws be damned.
Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
be complete, sir.
I would *LOVE* to post links to every linux-livecd that is currently shared with the help of Piratebay. And wait for the big companies to try sue me.
Becouse it must be piracy if there is a download that they cannot earn money on, is it not?
"Ah may be a backwoods country hyperchicken...".
You can only listen to one song at a time. So, unless you have less than 400 songs, you won't be listening to 399 or more of them. In fact, it's unlikely that anyone else will be listening to the same track as you when you DO listen to one of the 400 tracks you have and shared.
so what's been lost? One person listening to the track at a time. One purchase made to listen to that song.
I'm in Norway, a country that has decriminalised downloading for personal use. I also use Facebook. Come and get me RIAA!
no wonder I cant get onto FB right now. I added an app someone said was great yesterday, then when i woke up today i cant get on!! oops
Why are all the comments about sharing torrents of copyrighted work? /. that the lawsuits were about control. This is your chance to take that control away. Don't screw it up sharing Britney and Metallica. Share indie, get your friends to share indie, fuck the **IA.
Use this to share torrents of non-**IA affiliated artists.
Facebook claims to have 175 million active users. 175 million people sharing torrents of indies, music recommended by your friends, is the best advertising these artist could hope for.
It is also the record industries worst nightmare. Music they have no control over being shared (legally!) on a scale they cannot match.
It has been stated many times on
i just dont fucking care
fuck.
you.
all.
yes you!
hahahaha!!!
FUCK YOU1
Yes, YOU!
in THE TEETH!
If the copyright holders don't want to make money from their copyrights, why should anyone be denied access to them?
There is no loss. There is no potential loss even.
If nothing is lost, what's there to go to court for?
Utter nonsense, one would expect more from a Lawyer. The **AA can only sue symbolically because there is no cork big enough to dam the ocean. Sure they could figure out a way to send out 100 million scary threatening letters to most users... but like most spam most people ignore it.
Stupidity is its own reward.
sue the pants off all the hapless Facebook users who fell for it."
1) Very few people out there are clueless to copying, without permission, copyrighted material. Anyone whose watched a movie from video store rental, or service like on-demand, bought a DVD, or bought a cd has seen the labels has seen the copyright warnings (which have been around for at least two decades). Then there is the news. If you have a torrent client I would wager you are aware of the laws. There may be a few people out there, but really let's get serious about "hapless". I'm not buying the "i didn't know", neither does the law.
2) The RIAA said they are not sueing downloaders anymore, they are going to work with ISPs to warn and then punish people by disconnecting their ISP service. BTW, I've seen these letters (downloaded tv shows) and they are accurate. They know exactly when, what tv show, what episode, where it was from and my IP number. It came from my ISP provider.
So cut the villainy crap for once. I just love biased news. Slashdot = Fox news for liberals (btw i am a liberal, but i can't stand stupidity). Fair and balanced should be SLashdots new tag line.
I do not support "The Man". I also do not support your irrational stupidity
And by you driving a car to work making it harder for me to cycle you are depriving me of a happy livelihood and therefore owe me $80 Gazillion Dollars.
Lost-potential-profit is the art of lying.
However, I do need to disagree with "registrar." A copy certainly does have some value. That is the backup value which is immeasurable if you have some kind of all to common data disaster. But it seems like the best backup these days is the collective memory of the internet. No storage solution is foolproof. But if something lives on as a healthy torrent pool then it can be available almost indefinately (or until the power runs out) because the more copies you have the more likelyhood that one will survive and as you correctly point out one is enough to propagate as many more copies as you like.
Copy use to be a word meaning wealth and richness: copious bounty of the harvest. Nowadays the **AA liars whose primary value seems to be lost potential profit all have us believing that copy means fake or less than real. Whereas all good geeks know the primary function of a computer is copying data around while changing little bits of it - without the copy function there is no compute function.
Stupidity is its own reward.
Really? dude - judges are prone to dumb ass mistakes and assinine rulings just as much as legislatures prone to dumb ass mistakes and assinine laws. Judges may also not have the benefit of time like legislatures do and may not have as many people giving input. Remember a judge makes a sole decision, while your congressmen needs to get a consensus. That is why the legislative branch is the most powerful branch (by design) and the executive branch is the weakest branch (by design). Our founders didn't want a king making all the rules. Judges are the referee's. Yes reality muddles things a bit - but for the most part it's a fairly good model. So yea I did agree with the parent post and I am not one of those people who fell into the "probably have never ever read a Supreme..."
I do not support "The Man". I also do not support your irrational stupidity
Well, there are always exceptions, thus why I said "probably."
My point was that the OP really trivializes the work of the judicial branch. Yes, there are bad judges (probably more the lower in the system you go), and yes, there are good judges who make bad decisions. But to say that the entire court system works on feelings, not facts, is kind of absurd.
I don't see how you can read more than a few opinions and not come away with the impression that judges are an analytical bunch. Unless maybe you're reading Clarence Thomas? (ducks!)
A lot of geeks might find that Posner or Easterbrook really resonate with them. I like Breyer and Stevens. But whomever you like, it's pretty much certain that their writing is going to be more analytical and well-thought out than that of almost any Congress critter.
Also, I think it's false to claim that all of the legal battles geeks are facing are due to issues of fact vs. feeling. When it comes to stuff like copyright and patent law, a lot of it has to do with a legal system that hasn't caught up to modernity. That's not "fact vs. feeling" at all.
And while legislators have "people giving input", it seems like most of the time those "people" are industry lobbyists.
"Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
But I don't think it's our place to judge, and there certainly is plenty of music out there that would elevate society.
We need to get over the idea of personal copyright infringement. The idea that people could infringe copyright for personal use was de facto legal up until quite recently. It shouldn't suddenly be actionable now.
What happens when the RIAA loses?
the MPAA/RIAA worked very hard on getting the FEDS to back there copyright laws as illegal and criminal. Remember that blue warning you see before or after your DVD or the text file on your CD Audio. Copyright is civil, it is civil in an other matter except when it relates to something the MPAA/RIAA own or represent.
MP3s, P2P, Downloads, Basiclly the internet in general distrupted that and you know what, none of it will change, no matter how many 'little' people win their day in court. The bigger picture is still out there and it's only a matter of time before they squish all 'internet' issues in relation to the control of their content. MPAA/RIAA Lobby so hard on issues of there interests, who do you have lobbying on your behalf? No One. Accept it.
The only people who can change that is Lawyers and ONLY Lawyers. So until someone out there in the world shows up with some lawyers and money that equal or overpowers the MIAA/RIAA, in ever court where they hold presadent, you might as well continue to gamble until you get caught, cause it will happen sooner or later.
And this is no joke, there is only 1 industry big enough to take on the MPAA/RIAA and that is the porn and video game (whats left of it, the MPAA/RIAA have been busy buying up all the game companys) industry. Make no joke about it, those 2 have to unite for the common good of the people.