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File-Sharing For Personal Use Declared Legal In Portugal

New submitter M0j0_j0j0 writes "After receiving 2000 complaints regarding 'illegal file sharing' from ACAPOR regarding P2P networks, the Portuguese prosecutor refused to take the case into court on the premise that file sharing is not illegal in the territory if files are for personal and not commercial use. The court also stated that the complaints had, as sole evidence, the IP address of users, and that it is a wrong statement to assume an IP address is directly related to one individual. TorrentFreak has a piece in English with more details (original source in Portuguese)."

2 of 179 comments (clear)

  1. Re:U.S. law still applies by hpacheco · · Score: 5, Informative

    Portuguese citizens need to be reminded that they're still under the jurisdiction of U.S. law, and WILL be extradited to the U.S. for breaking any IP laws!

    there's no extradition agreement between the U.S. and Portugal

  2. Downloading = Legal, "making available" not so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Portuguese with some legal background:

    It has always been legal to own or acquire (download) unauthorized copies of most content. *
    It's legal to make how many copies you want for your own use and to share with other people
    within your "personal" sphere.

    What is illegal is "making such content available to the public", emphasis on "public" as in
    "general public".

    What the A.G. clarified is that, in the particular case of BT and similar P2P protocols,
    the act of seeding a file you are downloading, or did just download, enjoys the same treatment
    as if you were downloading using a traditional protocol, i.e., benefits from the "personal use"
    exception.

    This does not mean you can happily run a public W4R3Z FTP server with impunity, but it does clarify
    an important issue re: the law vs P2P downloads that had had no previous legal interpretation.

    It has also brought about an interesting IP != person argument which will be interesting to follow up on,
    in case of more serious offenses.

    AC

    * thanks to the lobbying efforts of the BSA-equivalent in the 90s, computer programs are dealt with differently
    and enjoy no "personal use" rights.