|
11 January 2008 2:10 by Andre "DVDBack23" Yoskowitz
| 2 comments
In Sweden, a court case involving a man who had allegedly uploaded 23,000 music tracks and 30 movies to file sharing networks has gone to retrial. The decision in the case will have implications for the future of whether police can raid file sharer's homes in search of evidence.
The man, a 31 year old from Linköping, Sweden, was initially charged with making the music and movies available for unauthorized download. However, there have been doubts surrounding Sweden’s Anti-Piracy Agency’s (APB) use of "questionable investigative techniques" and so prosecutors have dropped all the music related charges.
Rick Falkvinge, leader of the Swedish Pirate Party, commented on the case. “The public prosecutor dropped the bulk of the charges but the record industry decided to pick up the dropped ball and press ahead as a private criminal charge (’enskilt åtal’), meaning they have to act as a prosecutor themselves before a judge and jury.”
On the side of the IFPI, lawyer Lars Gustafsson commented, “We maintain that the technical evidence is sufficient. We have received an inquiry from the court if we would like to continue with the music file-sharing as its own indictment and we have said we would."
The court did not drop the charges related to the movies and therefore ordered a retrial.
“It is remarkable that public funds are spent on redoing the trial despite the fact that the public prosecutor decided to drop most of the charges,” Falkvinge added. “The record industry frequently states they have no desire to become a private police force, but these days, it looks like they more frequently put their foot than their money where their mouth is.”
Despite the dismissal of the music related charges, those relating to the movies can still prove to be costly if the man loses his case. In June 2006 a man was found guilty of uploading just one movie using DC, and the fine was equivalent to $2,500 USD.
Source:
TF
Permalink to this article
| |
Related articles:
Nearly 200,000 USD claim for Pirate Bay (31 January 2008)
Global music sales fell 10 percent in 2007 (24 January 2008)
TPB wants Demonoid in Sweden (16 January 2008)
EMI loses case to Usenet provider (15 January 2008)
50 Chinese sites remove piracy links (13 January 2008)
CES 2008: Content distributor to make Internet video available for mobile platforms (10 January 2008)
Fox to include iPod compatible digital copies with DVD releases? (9 January 2008)
CES 2008: FCC chairman promises investigation of complaints against Comcast (9 January 2008)
UK IP Minister thinks CD ripping should be legal (8 January 2008)
Apple sued for DRM practices (4 January 2008)
China to censor foreign video sharing sites (3 January 2008)
|
|
|
| Discuss this article! |
| nobrainer (Inactive) 11 January 2008 5:37 |
|
Even the Swedish politicians are speaking out about the media studios and their continual rhetoric! They may be able to control the American government but each country has its own laws and America needs to understand that they do not control global law, YET!
http://torrentfreak.com/swedish-politici...t-lobby-080110/
Originally posted by above link: Last week, seven Swedish MPs wrote to a prominent Swedish tabloid newspaper ‘Expressen’ to express their dissatisfaction with proposals for dealing with copyright infringers. Now, that number has increased to 13, and the issue seems to keep growing.
Initially, Karl Sigfrid, and 6 other MPs [Members of Parliament] wrote to Expressen (Swedish, English) to express their opposition to a plan proposed by Cecilia Renfors, a copyright analyst appointed by the Swedish government, in what Expressen called “Seven MPs defy the party line: Legalizing file sharing is not just the best solution, but the only solution”. Her plan was that ISPs would close down the connections of filesharers, preventing them from participating in any further copyright infringement. The condemnation for this was broad-based, from the Data inspection Board, the Competition Authority, all the way to the Swedish court of Appeal.
The message from the Moderate Party MPs to their Antipiratbyrån supporting colleagues was “be careful, they will never be satisfied”, drawing parallels to the earlier attempts to ban MP3 players, and VCRs, both areas in which, having failed to ban, industry groups are now making a profit from selling content.
The RIAA Soundexchange Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, EMI.
The MPAA Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, DISNEY, PARAMOUNT, FOX.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 11 January 2008 5:38
|
| borhan9 (AfterDawn Addict) 23 January 2008 16:46 |
|
|
Work in progress.
|
|
|
Latest newsLatest news from AfterDawn.com. Denon introduces ‘Universal’ Blu-ray player 5 Dec, 2008 | 3 comments MPA wants London a ‘Fake-Free Zone’ before Olympics 4 Dec, 2008 | 3 comments YouTube to restrict sexually suggestive content 4 Dec, 2008 $99 4GB iPhone coming to Wal-Mart? 4 Dec, 2008 | 3 comments 'Dark Knight' becomes best selling movie of 2008, on iTunes 4 Dec, 2008 | 1 comment MySpace testing mobile video streaming service 4 Dec, 2008 Amazon MP3 store opens in UK 4 Dec, 2008 Pioneer 400GB Blu-ray discs will play on PS3 4 Dec, 2008 | 17 comments PS3 firmware update adds full screen flash viewing 4 Dec, 2008 | 5 comments Digital music sales to increase heavily by 2013, says firm 3 Dec, 2008 | 4 comments Xbox 360 outsells PS3 3-to-1 on Black Friday 3 Dec, 2008 | 39 comments RIAA sues hospitalized teen 2 Dec, 2008 | 34 comments
More news... 
Search for headlinesSearch through our news archive. 
Latest threadsRecently updated discussion threads. More... 
Last week's most popular software downloads
Most popular devicesLast week's most popular products in our product comparison service. More products... 
Top linksMost popular links - Blasteroids.com
Download game trailers, demos and more - TorrentReactor.Net
The most active torrents on the web - Digital-Digest
Latest DivX, XviD, DVD, Blu-Ray, HD DVD News - OpenSubtitles.org
download DivX subtitles from the biggest open database - CDRInfo.com
The Hardware Authority - DVDHelp.us
DVD help, tutorials, FAQ, and very popular free help forum! - Torrentreactor.TO
The most active torrents on the web - dvd ripper
rip DVD to VCD, DivX, MPEG, SVCD, AVI easily and quickly.

|