Quote:The police investigation into The Pirate Bay has finally came to an end. Today, the Pirate Bay received over 4,000 pages of legal paperwork. At first sight there doesn’t appear to be any evidence that suggests The Pirate Bay is involved in any illegal activities, but that is up to the court to decide now.
During the Pirate Bay raid in May of last year, the Swedish police confiscated 180 servers, most of which had nothing to do with TPB, and actually belonged to other customers of Pirate Bay’s ISP.
The Pirate Bay was back online only a few days after the raid whilst the police continued the investigation.
The police, and prosecutor Håkan Roswall spent over a year trying to find something they could use against The Pirate Bay crew. Now, after having extended custody several times, they think they have enough evidence to start a case.
Last month prosecutor Roswall announced that he plans to press charges against 5 people involved with The pirate bay, stating that the 5 individuals will be charged with “facilitating copyright infringement” before the end of January next year.
Today there was another milestone as the Pirate Bay crew received all the legal papers, just over a month before they will be charged. Brokep from The Pirate Bay told TorrentFreak that they will ask for an extension. “I’m not going to spend Christmas and New Years eve reading these piles of paper,” he added.
Unhappy with all the paper wasted on the case, Brokep and the “The Pro Piracy Movement” bought 5 trees, to compensate for the environmental losses.
Police Closes Pirate Bay Investigation, Trial Awaits
The evidence consists of reports about files that were found on the servers, and as can be seen from the picture, a lot of top torrent lists. It also reveals personal details on the people who are involved with the Pirate Bay, as well as the alleged money streams. Brokep told TorrentFreak that they don’t have any evidence that The Bay is doing something illegal according to Swedish law.
On a side note, whilst the police may not have found evidence that the BitTorrent tracker was involved in illegal activity, they did find a bug in TPB’s tracker code “Hypercube”. Apparently the number of downloads reported by the software was incorrect because of some counting issues. Apart from that SKL (State Crime Lab) certified it to completely follow the BitTorrent standard.
Unfortunately they found this bug a little late, The Pirate Bay switched to new tracker software a few days ago.
So here is my plan to save the planet, stop the bullsh!t lawsuits and save the rainforests.
RE: Police finish Pirate Bay Investigation, trial awaits.
UncertainGod Wrote:Unhappy with all the paper wasted on the case, Brokep and the “The Pro Piracy Movement” bought 5 trees, to compensate for the environmental losses.
RE: Police finish Pirate Bay Investigation, trial awaits.
i see what there trying to do.
there trying to bore tpb out of existence because that's all they CAN do. and in doing so destroying half a rainforrest in the process. on the plus side tpb now has months of toilet paper ;)