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Norwegian Supreme Court: Linking to MP3s illegal

29 January 2005 13:35 by Petteri "dRD" Pyyny | 15 comments

Norwegian Supreme Court: Linking to MP3s illegal Norway's Supreme Court has upheld the lower court's earlier ruling and decided that linking from a website to MP3 files is illegal even when the actual MP3 files aren't hosted by or in any way associated to the website linking to them.

Case is about a Norwegian teenager named Frank Allan Bruvik who set up a website called napster.no back in 2001 and allowed his users to submit direct links to MP3 files that would then become a huge browsable list of links to MP3 files across the Web.

Now, the case sounds like a really simple -- providing links to illegal material, guilty. Not quite. Can Google be sued, closed down and its owners thrown to jail because they provide links to millions and millions of sites that distribute cracks, illegal audio copies, etc. Should the person linking to an external site take a full responsibility of the material also behind that link? And where is the limit? Is it that linking directly to .mp3 files is illegal? Is it legal if I'd link to a otherwise blank page (instead of directly to the MP3 file itself) that has only a link that says "Download" and that would then open up the MP3 file?

Well, Norwegian court has decided that its technical knowledge is broad enough to answer to all of these questions and apparently direct linking to illegal material, even if it is not put there or hosted by you, is illegal. Period.

For providing links upto 170 MP3 files (compare this to millions available on P2P networks), Mr. Bruvik violated Norway's copyright legislation and has to pay 100,000 kroner (€12,126; $15,807) to Tono, the music industry's lobby group in Norway. The ruling was identical to lower court's original decision back in 2003, which was later overruled by Appeals Court who decided that Mr. Bruvik didn't violate any laws, but the users who put up the links, did.

Tono's representative said that they were satisfied with the ruling, because it showed that music piracy would not be accepted.

Source: BBC

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Related articles:

  • Norway puts more pressure on Apple over iTunes DRM (6 November 2008)
  • Spanish court decides linking to P2P downloads is legal (19 October 2007)
  • Russian MP3 site under criminal investigation (23 February 2005)
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    tyberius7 (Newbie) 29 January 2005 14:39 Send private message to this user   
    The world has officially gone mad!
    domie (Member) 29 January 2005 14:44 Send private message to this user   
    nothing surprising there, the writing has been on the wall for a long time now, for those of us who run ed2k sites it´s really a simple choice..host your site in the anally retentive USA or European Union and get busted eventually even though you do nothing illegal or move to Asia, Canada or somewhere even more obscure and more tolerant and less funded by the RIAA and MPAA.
    ddp (Moderator) 29 January 2005 14:47 Send private message to this user   
    they're working on an appeal here in canada so don't count your chickens yet
    domie (Member) 29 January 2005 15:01 Send private message to this user   
    I never count my hcickens you just have to be ready to move ahead of the times instead of with them and that means checking out the legal situation in any country where you rent a server.The fact that the law may change in the future isn´t a reason to stop renting a server in a country which permits it at the moment.
    WiteWizrd (Member) 29 January 2005 15:05 Send private message to this user   
    as technology moves forward stuff like this keeps happening. eventually we will be told when to breath, and every family will have a window of time for when there computer can be on. hopefully not in my lifetime...the government can kiss my pure white ***!!!
    ingram091 (Newbie) 30 January 2005 1:40 Send private message to this user   
    Whos for a ISP on the moon? just point your little reciever dish at sea of tranquility and your off.
    Ghostdog (Senior Member) 30 January 2005 6:19 Send private message to this user   
    So linking to any MP3 is illegal? What about linking to Ogg´s or other formats? Also illegal, most likely.

    What about linking to MP3´s from independent artists who have given the public the permission to distribute their music? Illegal?
    ddp (Moderator) 30 January 2005 6:23 Send private message to this user   
    no as artist gave permission whereas others did not give permission
    parazitez (Member) 30 January 2005 7:28 Send private message to this user   
    just sending my crime tip to fbi.gov on the great piracy organization known as www.google.com and www.archive.org... oopss... i guess i committed a crime already.
    A_Klingon (Moderator) 30 January 2005 13:44 Send private message to this user   
    Does it not seem to everyone that these corporate media hogs are attempting to stir paranoia into the very hearts of people? Are you paranoid yet? I'm not.

    You can't stop the wind from blowing. The internet is larger than any Corporation ever invented. You cannot squash P2P file-sharing no matter how many children you sue, or how many hostile threats of law suits you promise. You cannot stop global linking to mp3s whether direct, or 2nd party or 3rd/4th/nth-party. Big business has not learned their lesson yet. Big business is perpetually stupid.

    I don't want to draw unfair analogies, but these Corporations seem to be indulging in the same terrorist strategies as the alQueda in Iraq. (No, really....)

    If you are caught voting, you will be killed. (If you are caught downloading mp3 files you will be sued). If you are even spotted leaving a voting booth, you and your family will be killed. (If you link to an mp3, when we find you, we will sue you and your kids).

    Sounds like Corporate terrorism to me!!!

    Protect yourself everyone. Turn all your computers OFF right now, and don't ever visit another webpage. (Lock your doors, draw the shades, unplug the phone...)

    Stoooooopid ..................

    Recent history has taught us that for every single new restriction imposed on us by some corporation, there will be 1000 new resourseful, intelligent workarounds developed by the internet community to nullify it.

    No..... they never learn.
    ddp (Moderator) 30 January 2005 13:52 Send private message to this user   
    the only way to stop that is to shut down the internet & i doubt that will happen as it will affect corporations as bad as the average individual
    Itaka (Newbie) 31 January 2005 4:33 Send private message to this user   
    I suppose that this it the website of TONO: http://www.tono.no

    It probably is useless, but you could mail them your opinion on this matter.
    int3gr4 (Junior Member) 1 February 2005 6:40 Send private message to this user   
    Why email them my opinion when I can just email them some mp3 links? =|
    skan85 (Newbie) 2 February 2005 0:49 Send private message to this user   
    A_Klingon I totally agree with you. How naive of them!
    A_Klingon (Moderator) 2 February 2005 5:27 Send private message to this user   
    Thank you! :-)

    In my mind's-eye I can 'see' all these executive big-sh### sitting around the corporate back-boardrooms smoking Cuban cigars, sipping cognacs dreaming up all this crap to cause hardship on a select few in an attempt to justify their 6-figure salaries, 3-BMW homes, and private mistresses. But you wanna know a little secret, skan? Shhhhh.... this is just a secret between us here.....

    Not only have they lost, they *know* they have lost. What's more, they have known it for years.

    Just don't expect them to admit it to anyone. My comment that the internet is larger than any Corporation ever invented is proven true every day as more and more paid media-download services go online. Are the Global Record Companies "embracing new opportunities on the internet" ? Hell, NO! THEY'RE SUCKING-UP TO IT. (To you and me). WE are bigger than any of them! (And a lot more handsome, too).
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