A Swedish court handed the four men from The Pirate Bay a guilty verdict for being accessories to copyright infringement on Friday. The ruling in the landmark case is a symbolic victory for the entertainment industry, which is desperately trying to halt the rampant sharing of copyrighted material over the Internet.
The Local reports that the four defendants were each sentenced to one year in prison and collectively ordered to pay 30 million kroner (USD 3.56 million) in damages. The court stated the men were “providing a website with … well-developed search functions, easy uploading and storage possibilities, and with a tracker linked to the website, the accused have incited the crimes that the filesharers have committed. [They] knew that copyrighted material was being fileshared.”
The four men deny any wrongdoing and will appeal the verdict all the way to the Swedish Supreme Court if necessary. The Pirate Bay, which was started in 2003, claims to have 22 million bitTorrent users around the world.
Although Swedish police have raided the website’s offices many times, it is still in operation with servers spread across several countries. The courtroom case had some truly memorable moments, with plenty of theatrics and great one-liners.
But in the end it will be known for beginning the long process of defining the legal issues involved with filesharing and distributing copyrighted material through the Internet. The matter is far from over, and in this ever-changing digital world a new format for filesharing will probably emerge before bitTorrent’s role is even resolved.