Swedish Police Raid the Pirate Bay Again
o_ferguson writes: TorrentFreak is reporting that police in Sweden carried out a raid in Stockholm today, seizing servers, computers, and other equipment. At the same time The Pirate Bay and several other torrent-related sites disappeared offline. Although no official statement has been made, TF sources confirm action against TPB. This is not the first time that this has happened.
Site down, random shuffle, site comes back. I wonder if they'll find someone else to arrest this time around.
Though I thought they finally got smart and started hosting elsewhere?
You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
Sweden is trying hard to make a name for itself as a place high tech start ups should work. Sweden is a place that will allow them to be creative without fear of undo influence from multinationals or foreign influence. cough cough movie studios cough cough riaa cough cough Assange...
-- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
TPB doesn't stay down long. It's like the Hydra of piracy. Cut off all the heads you want but it won't stay dead.
Law enforcement and judicial officials working round the clock to ensure the world is safe for multinational corporations.
There's always Netflix, iTunes, Amazon... /duck
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torrentz.eu has never let me down.
- In Soviet Korea, only old people loose all their bases to Natalie Portman's petrified hot grits overlords.
12 hours? 24 hours? I'm pretty sure TPB has had longer downtimes that were self-inflicted.
If they can take TPB down and keep it down for a month? That's news.
According to MPAA accounting, the few minutes TPB was offline generated 5.6 billion dollars in sales.
And if we use Verizon accounting for the same numbers, the few minutes TPB was offline generated 560 billion dollars in sales.
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The Swedish people must be delighted to know how much is directly and indirectly being brought to the table in the name of removing those evil and dangerous criminals at the Pirate Bay.
Sovereignty, reputation as a safe place to do business, a reputation for not being corrupt, and a long cultural history of preserving freedom and privacy are a lot to sacrifice but as long as a perfectly legal file sharing site can be brought to its knees for literally hours it's well done.
Furthermore I'm sure not a single penny has crossed the border from Hollywood, and no favors were exchanged with US politicians to make this happen.
If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
iTunes does not work on my 10 month old Panasonic "Smart" TV, or Linux based HTPC, or Sony PS3. Amazon only recently started selling ebooks here, nothing else. Netflix is great though, now if they can finally convince content providers to license them more content.
So what are these alternatives?
http://thepiratebay.ee/
Works for me!
Banks in EVERY jurisdiction carry out transactions with and pay interest on money deposited by criminals of various stripes, from tax evaders to mobsters to drug lords to terrorists. And in many cases the banksters know the provenance of those funds, and simply don't care, 'cause business is business after all. Not to mention the thefts the banks themselves commit, which are only not considered illegal via the legal legerdemain of calling them 'service fees'. So why do governments, (and by extension, their corporate masters), have such a hate on for the TPB? Yeah, I know, it's a rhetorical question, but I had to ask it.
So Pirate Bay is raided and shut down, and its founders thrown in prison, while bank CEO's are allowed to conduct business freely and in full daylight with impunity. It seems that a lot of somebodies in a lot of places consider the facilitation of file sharing a more heinous crime than the facilitation of theft, murder, gun running, etc. Gee, that disconnect wouldn't have anything at all to do with the profits of big corporations, would it?
'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.