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Author Topic: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial  (Read 20294 times)

Offline olddays1

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The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« on: February 08, 2009, 04:45:44 am »
The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
Written by enigmax on February 07, 2009
http://torrentfreak.com/the-pirate-bay-demand-webcast-of-trial-090207/

Set to start in just a few days time, the trial of The Pirate Bay will be one of the most important cases the file-sharing community has ever witnessed. However, due to restrictions, the number of people viewing it first hand could be very limited indeed. “Time to make demands,” says Peter Sunde.
On February 16th 2009, one of the biggest trials in P2P history begins. The case of the largest BitTorrent tracker, The Pirate Bay, will be followed by millions around the world.

The Pirate Bay team have been preparing for the media battle, in part by designating their tour bus as the site’s official media center. But already there are complaints about how accessible the trial will be to the public, with TiAMO and Brokep demanding changes to how it will be made available. In true Pirate Bay style, they want everyone to have access, one way or another.

According to Pirate Bay co-founder Fredrik Neij (aka TiAMO) the case will be heard in room 9 of Stockholm’s District Court. This room has space for maximum 35-40 people to view the case. At least 20 of these seats will be reserved for the press and, you can bet, these will be taken up by the mainstream press, many of which are unsympathetic to the site’s cause, a point not lost on Peter Sunde, aka Brokep.

“Traditional media is 90% owned by the opposition in this case and that is something that really must be taken into account,” he notes.

The court will provide another area which will have the trial’s audio fed in. “There will be a room where you can hear the sound from the trial,” says TiAMO, “this room can hold 20-25 people,” but the space allocated just isn’t enough.

“So this does not work,” says TiAMO. “I want a request for real premises immediately so they have time to fix the problem.” He’s very unhappy at the space allocated, noting that the case is one of the biggest political cases in recent times and since there are four people on trial, there isn’t even enough space for their family members to be present.

“I NEED a room for at least 150 people, 20 reserved for the family and 80 to 100 reserved for the press and public. It need not be in the same room, but we need several rooms REQUIRING video too, not just sound,” he demands.

Brokep says that in addition to the seats held back for the traditional press, he is set to demand that the court reserves seats for bloggers too.

As the discussions continue over the proposals do a live webcast of the court case of a Boston University student versus the RIAA, Brokep wants similar for the Pirate Bay. They want the case transmitted live on the web.

“We want to show how it works. Cards on the table, everything should be transparent!”

And why not?

Offline billyfridge

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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #1 on: February 08, 2009, 07:43:04 am »
Surely it is up to their legal representatives to insist on a larger venue for the trial!!!!

Offline olddays1

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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #2 on: February 09, 2009, 03:19:28 am »
Those wacky pirates do have a pair!


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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #4 on: February 17, 2009, 10:36:20 am »
I thing the people who should be prosecuted are the multitude of porn sites, they are a threat to the morals of young people. the P2P is all about money. [mad]

Offline olddays1

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Offline chip!

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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #6 on: February 19, 2009, 10:34:33 am »
very interesting trial so far...

thanks for the links!
  -  https://convivea.com  -   And...  boom goes the dynamite.

Offline olddays1

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Offline olddays1

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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #8 on: February 22, 2009, 06:47:14 am »

Offline olddays1

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Offline olddays1

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« Last Edit: February 26, 2009, 05:09:29 am by olddays1 »

texasboy

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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #11 on: February 26, 2009, 05:07:26 am »
 ;D  Starting to become interesting.lol
cheers

Offline olddays1

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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #12 on: February 27, 2009, 06:19:47 am »
Pirate Bay Witness’ Wife Overwhelmed With Flowers
Written by Ernesto on February 27, 2009

http://torrentfreak.com/pirate-bay-witness-wife-overwhelmed-with-flowers-090227/

When Professor and media researcher Roger Wallis left the stand yesterday, the court asked whether he wanted to be reimbursed for his appearance. “You are welcome to send some flowers to my wife,” he responded. In the hours that followed, many Pirate Bay supporters took this suggestion to hand.

Professor and media researcher Roger Wallis appeared as an expert witness at the Pirate Bay trial yesterday. He was questioned on the link between the decline of album sales and filesharing. Wallis told the court that his research has shown that there is no relation between the two.

He was heavily attacked by industry lawyers Danowsky, Pontén and Wadsted who did everything they could to discredit and slander his reputation. When Wallis was asked whether he wanted to be reimbursed for travel expenses etc, he light-heartedly suggested sending some flowers to his wife.

His statement was picked up by the large audience listening in to the live audio from the trial and flowers soon began arriving at the Wallis’ house.

texasboy

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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #13 on: February 27, 2009, 06:34:49 am »
 ;D
Who`s paying for all this legal stuff. With the fee`s all these lawyers are getting.? And considering the music business is in tatters.lol.
cheers

Offline olddays1

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Re: The Pirate Bay Demand Webcast of Trial
« Reply #14 on: March 02, 2009, 01:29:08 am »