Pirate Bay Founders Found Guilty in Sweden Amidst Web Copyright Drama
Even before the battle over SOPA and PIPA has reached its climax, the media industry is going after the people who are making its copyrighted property available for free online.
The particularly case involving The Pirate Bay has come to end this week, and it set a rather interesting precedence for the rest of the battle between Hollywood and illegal uploaders.
Wired reported that the Swedish Supreme Court decided not to change the sentences of the four Pirate Bay founders who were convicted back in 2009. Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij, Carl Lundström and Gottfrid Svartholm are currently sharing fines totaling about $6.8 million, as well as 34 months of time in jail split among the four.
There are a lot of interesting twists to the case. The defense was based entirely on the claim that they’re innocent because no pirated material was stored on their servers, but rather in third party locations. The Pirate Way works by providing users links to uploaded video or music found on other sites, instead of streaming content directly like some of the other websites that have been shut down recently.
This wasn’t enough to persuade the judge, and found them to be accomplices. Sweden’s Supreme Court evidently accepted the decision.
Lundström’s lawyer, Per E. Samuelsson, blasted the Supreme Court for refusing to review the conviction. “The verdict is absurd,” he said. “I am disappointed that the court is so uninterested in dissecting and analysing the legal twists and turns of one of the world’s most high-profile legal cases of all time.”
The Pirate Bay is not the first site that took a hit recently. Megaupload has also been forced to cease operations by the authorities, and Ex.ua has been shut down earlier yesterday.
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