March 6, 2009 3:07 PM PST

Biggest-ever Internet piracy bust claimed in Sweden

by Erik Palm
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Swedish police on Friday reported making a major Internet piracy bust.

Authorities said they seized computer equipment belonging to a Stockholm-area man whom they suspected of violating local copyright law. The police, who carried out the raid on February 9, only disclosed the news Friday.

"We made a bust. A server and computers have been taken and are being analyzed now," said Mats Johansson, a precinct commander in Stockholm, told CNET News in an interview.

Johansson said the man, whose identity was not disclosed, was questioned and subsequently released. He is now the target of an investigation by government prosecutors.

The seized server contained 65 terabytes of digital data, consisting of films, TV series, computer programs, and the music equivalent of 16,000 movies, according to the Antipiracy Agency, an organization based in Sweden that's supported by a consortium of film and game organizations to fight Internet piracy.

The server was located in Brandbergen, south of Stockholm, the Swedish capital. The police raid took place just before the individuals behind The Pirate Bay Web site went to court to defend themselves against charges of helping millions of Internet users illegally download copyright-protected movies, music, and computer software.

The Pirate Bay has not been accused of being behind the site. Still, Peter Sunde, a spokesperson for the file-sharing site, said in an interview with the Swedish news site SvD.se that he did not believe the claims made by the Antipiracy Agency, which described the Stockholm arrest as the biggest digital copyright bust in the nation's history.

"More than 800,000 people have uploaded files to Pirate Bay, so I do not believe it is the source of the entire problem," Sunde told SVD.se. "But it is possible that it is a significant source."

The Antipiracy Agency claimed that the server was part of the Nordic FTP ring called "Sunnydale," comprising 10 servers. After the bust, the ring went down and could not be accessed online.

The Antipiracy Agency said that despite the site's high security, it was able to secure the evidence it needed, which it then turned over to police.

"The well-organized pirates on the scene seemed to have overestimated their ability to hide their identity and location, but the bust showed that we could find the responsible entity," Henrik Ponten, a lawyer who works for the Swedish Antipiracy Agency, said in a statement released to the press.

Attempts by CNET to reach The Pirate Bay for comment Friday were unsuccessful.

Erik Palm, a business reporter for Swedish national television, is joining CNET News as a spring 2009 fellow with Stanford University's Innovation Journalism program. When he's not working, he enjoys kayaking and exploring California's hiking trails. E-mail Erik.
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by Vegaman_Dan March 6, 2009 3:29 PM PST
And the fact that nobody noticed that this person's systems were pulled off the internet indicates that the problem is far and beyond just this one instance.

It's a drop in the pool and the authorities are using a sieve to bail out the water.
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by zcline March 6, 2009 6:53 PM PST
Did you not read the article??

"The Antipiracy Agency claimed that the server was part of the Nordic FTP ring called "Sunnydale," comprising 10 servers. After the bust, the ring went down and could not be accessed online."

Nobody noticed? The more people they catch the less I'll have to deal with DRM infested software when I decide to buy a product legally. Good riddens.
by ranpha March 6, 2009 10:06 PM PST
That article is wrong. There are 10 servers, hosting 65 terabytes of data. Only 1 server was seized (which is part of 65TB of pirated data), and the other 9 servers disappeared for protection after the seizure. The Sunnydale operator wasn't even arrested, and it wasn't even clear whether he/she is Swedish at all.
by Acid_Reign March 6, 2009 8:35 PM PST
Do you honestly think that a decline in piracy would lead to a decline in DRM? Content providers, relinquishing control of their intellectual property? Ahahaha.
Reply to this comment
by pithenumber March 7, 2009 9:27 AM PST
yeah
the less need to protect, the less protection

unless investors are crazy which they probably are though
by Grant_D March 7, 2009 10:42 AM PST
"and the music equivalent of 16,000 movies" what is the music equivalent of a movie?
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by pentest March 7, 2009 11:53 AM PST
The corporate police force strikes again!

Too bad ordinary people don't have a policing agency looking out for them.
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by contentcreator--2008 March 7, 2009 1:39 PM PST
What's that, the Thieves Guild?
by gertruded March 8, 2009 5:27 AM PDT
Well, the depression will destroy these corporations that behave so badly. The corporate police will disappear.
Reply to this comment
by ferretboy88 March 8, 2009 7:22 AM PDT
Why do people think they should get everything free. Get off welfare and get a job.
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by powertoast March 8, 2009 8:23 PM PDT
The thing I don't get here is how or why The Pirate Bay, is even mentioned in this article.

This server and FTP ring don't have anything to do with The Pirate Bay, though the writer suggest guilt by association.

And how this quote goes unchallenged is beyond me, since The Pirate Bay you cannot upload files to The Pirate Bay, they are a search engine not a file storage site.

"More than 800,000 people have uploaded files to Pirate Bay, so I do not believe it is the source of the entire problem," Sunde told SVD.se. "But it is possible that it is a significant source."

I would take a hard look at Erik Palm, and see if biased inaccurate reporting is common place before letting him join CNET.
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by ilbknownas1 March 9, 2009 10:04 AM PDT
I'm just glad its not aXXo, thats all that matters to me, lol
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