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19 May, 2015 19:22

Swedish court orders Pirate Bay key domains seized

Swedish court orders Pirate Bay key domains seized

In a unique case for Sweden, the Stockholm District Court has ruled for the two key domains owned by file-sharing service The Pirate Bay to be seized by the state and thus put out of action over copyright violations.

The Stockholm court ruled Tuesday that the Sweden-based domains ThePirateBay.se and PirateBay.se “are property that can be forfeited.”

It’s the first case when Swedish prosecutors have directly targeted domain registers.

The Pirate Bay, founded in Sweden in 2003, allows users to search, download and contribute magnet links, torrent files using BitTorrent protocol and peer-to-peer file-sharing. In 2009, Sweden found its founders guilty of assisting copyright infringement.

Tuesday’s ruling was handed down after the court discovered that the domain names belong to TPB co-founder Fredrik Neij, currently serving a one-year sentence in a Swedish jail.

Fredrik Neij has participated in the crimes that have been identified and he is the actual holder of the domain names. It is therefore no obstacle to confiscate domain names from him. The prosecutor’s primary claim with respect to Fredrik Neij should be upheld and domain names should be confiscated from him in accordance with the Copyright Act,” the court said in its ruling.

READ MORE: Last of Pirate Bay founders arrested on Laos-Thailand border

The motion targeting the two domain names was originally filed by Swedish prosecutor Fredrik Ingblad in 2013. He requested the Punkt SE organization, which controls all Swedish domains, to shut down piratebay.se and thepiratebay.se.

“A domain name assists a website. If the site is used for criminal purposes, the domain name is a criminal instrument,” Ingblad told Dagens Nyheter in February.

However, Punkt SE has argued that holding a domain registry responsible for infringement has no basis in law.

In the Tuesday ruling, the court agreed that the internet infrastructure foundation has done nothing illegal and agreed that it could not force it to block certain domain names. As an alternative to forcing the foundation to prevent anyone from registering the domain name, the court handed over the domains’ ownership to the government of Sweden.

‘TPB to run on other domains’

Though the famous file-sharing site will be blocked from .se domains, TPB representatives told TorrentFreak that they have more domains left to use.

Previously the site disappeared offline when Swedish police seized servers, computers, and equipment of previously elusive web pirates in December 2014.

However, after being unavailable for hours it was back online, changing its web domain to .cr (Costa Rica). The same month it changed its domain names several times, eventually returning to .se.

A few days following the raid, the Berlin chairman of the Pirate Party told RT that no matter how many times law enforcement cracks down on The Pirate Bay, it will find a way to reopen.

“It was already shut down in 2005, and the result was the creation of a party called Pirate Party coming with all the ideas of sharing of information, of knowledge and culture on the internet. And freedom on the internet,” Bruno Kramm said.

Kramm added that “each time you shut the Pirate Bay down, we will multiply.”

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