Pirate Bay founder ordered to pay back R6,000,000

17 June 2016
Good riddance to video game pirates

Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde has been ordered to pay $395,000 (R6,009,154) in damages for music shared through the site, reports TorrentFreak.

The Helsinki District Court ordered Sunde to pay the sum to record labels including Sony, Universal, Warner and EMI despite leaving the website in 2009.

The four music publishers claimed that over 60 of their artists were shared across the site, and despite no claims of Sunde sharing anything personally, the lawsuit holds him responsible.

Sunde and Pirate Bay co-founders Fredrik Neij and Gottfrid Svartholm owe large sums of money to copyright holders following adverse decisions in cases dating back years.

 

None of those judgments have been satisfied and there’s no reason to believe this one will be any different.

In recent years, Sunde himself has called for the closing of The Pirate Bay, calling it “a shadow of its former self”.


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  1. Black Confusion
    19.06.2016 at 06:43

    Well, everyone keeps reminding us that copyright infringement is a civil matter. This is a valid enforcement of the rights holder’s claim. However, an analogous question is why weapons manufacturers are not liable for damages caused by their product. The Pirate Bay was simply a means after all, just like guns are a means to cause death and injury. Just my two cents.

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