Danish anti-piracy outfit, Antipiratgruppen, has raided the home of a Pirate Bay uploader. The Pirate Bay user, in his 20's, created torrents for 4 movies and uploaded them onto the website, lived in Denmark which caught the attention of Antipiratgruppen.
Antipiratgruppen says that uploading 4 movie torrents makes the user a "big fish", even though there are users on The Pirate Bay that have uploaded a hundred times more.
“We are waiting for the IT expert’s report on yesterday’s action, but there is no doubt that he is behind massive violations of copyright. We found and seized several hard drives, web server, etc. so it will take time to go through it all. The case is a good example of how a case which at first glance seemed modest, in fact, is about massive piracy. At least in Denmark,” said Maria Fredenslund, a lawyer with Antipiratgruppen.
This follows a case in Australia where James Burt, 24, had to pay $AUD 1.5 million ($USD 1.3m) in compensation to Nintendo for uploading a copy of the Wii game New Super Mario Bros a week before the official Australian release date. The game itself was one of the fastest selling games of all time, according to Nintendo, despite the leaked pirated copy. The copy Burt had uploaded was unhacked and therefore unplayable before further work had to be done to make it playable in modified Wii consoles.
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Australian Nintendo pirate:
Antipiratgruppen says that uploading 4 movie torrents makes the user a "big fish", even though there are users on The Pirate Bay that have uploaded a hundred times more.
“We are waiting for the IT expert’s report on yesterday’s action, but there is no doubt that he is behind massive violations of copyright. We found and seized several hard drives, web server, etc. so it will take time to go through it all. The case is a good example of how a case which at first glance seemed modest, in fact, is about massive piracy. At least in Denmark,” said Maria Fredenslund, a lawyer with Antipiratgruppen.
This follows a case in Australia where James Burt, 24, had to pay $AUD 1.5 million ($USD 1.3m) in compensation to Nintendo for uploading a copy of the Wii game New Super Mario Bros a week before the official Australian release date. The game itself was one of the fastest selling games of all time, according to Nintendo, despite the leaked pirated copy. The copy Burt had uploaded was unhacked and therefore unplayable before further work had to be done to make it playable in modified Wii consoles.
More:
Australian Nintendo pirate:
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