Illegal downloaders to face damages claims...

Zim Hosein

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Super Moderator
Nov 27, 1999
65,357
404
126
Illegal downloaders to face damages claims
Sweden on Wednesday passed a law banning the sharing of copyrighted material on the Internet without payment of royalties, in a bid to crack down on free downloading of music, films and computer games.

The law, which was approved by a large majority in parliament, will go into effect on July 1st. Those who violate the law will be ordered to pay damages.

Members of parliament stressed in a debate prior to the vote that musicians, writers, filmmakers and others ought to receive fair payment for their work.

"Every worker should be entitled to a reasonable salary," Left Party member of parliament Tasso Stafilidis said.

Swedish government and industry officials have claimed that unlicensed use of copyrighted material is rampant in the country.

"Since 2001, the record industry in Sweden has seen its revenues drop by more than 30 percent," Lars Gustafsson, chief executive of the Swedish branch of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, IFPI, told AFP recently, insisting that at least part of the decline reflected illegal downloading.

According to Henrik Ponten, legal council at the Swedish Anti-piracy Bureau, "the (piracy) problem is bigger in Sweden than in any other country in Europe."

He said that at least 500,000 of Sweden's nine million inhabitants use file-sharing programs to download and post illegal copies of films, music and computer games on the Internet.

Some 7,000 cases involving the illegal uploading of copyrighted material, are discovered annually per million inhabitants in the Scandinavian country, compared to 2,000 on average in Europe, he said.


Parliament also approved a proposal to sharply raise the price of blank CDs, DVDs, videotapes and cassettes to compensate for legal copying of material. The price of a five gigabyte DVD is expected to rise from 10 kronor to 30 kronor.

Nevertheless, just a week ago Sweden's justice minister Thomas Bodström called for record companies to stop copy-protecting CDs. He said that if the industry continued to put blocking technology on new music CDs, the government would make it illegal.

"Obviously it should be possible to make a copy of your own newly-purchased CD for an mp3 player, or to make an extra copy of the CD to have in the car," he argued on the Swedish Television web site.

The issue has split the country, with a high-profile legal battle between the Anti-piracy Bureau and ISP Bredbandsbolaget finally being settled after much mudslinging.

A month ago over a hundred of Sweden's best-known pop artists signed an open letter protesting against the illegal downloading of their music. "We do not want to be robbed," they said in the letter, which was distributed by the Swedish branch of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI).

Among the artists who signed the letter were Per Gessle, Lena Philipsson, Alcazar, Magnus Uggla and Soundtrack of our Lives.

The new copyrighting law will also apply to photocopies of whole books, which is common at Swedish universities where many students consider required reading material too costly.

Illegal downloaders to face damages claims :confused:
 

Epic Fail

Diamond Member
May 10, 2005
6,252
2
0
somehow I think the bandwidth usage in Sweden will increase in the next month
 

Sphexi

Diamond Member
Feb 22, 2005
7,280
0
0
I think this applies to people posting actual copies of files, not torrents of files. I could be wrong though, I have almost no clue about EU law :)
 

SVT Cobra

Lifer
Mar 29, 2005
13,264
2
0
Originally posted by: Sphexi
I think this applies to people posting actual copies of files, not torrents of files. I could be wrong though, I have almost no clue about EU law :)


hmm anybody know this? i am to lazy to read..
 

jagec

Lifer
Apr 30, 2004
24,442
6
81
Sweden on Wednesday passed a law banning the sharing of copyrighted material on the Internet without payment of royalties
"wednesday"? So it was perfectly legal to pirate before that?
 

rubix

Golden Member
Oct 16, 1999
1,302
2
0
i like that not only are people in sweden photocopying entire books, it is apprently so rampant that they had to stick that in the law too. arggg me likes ta read mateyyy.
 
May 31, 2001
15,326
2
0
At least the government is calling to have CD copy protection removed. I have getting a new CD and not having it work because of that crap.
 

Conky

Lifer
May 9, 2001
10,709
0
0
Originally posted by: Freejack2
Originally posted by: Lonyo
Originally posted by: cjgallen
Isn't Pirate Bay in Sweden?


By the way, we will NOT shut down the 1st of July.


July 2nd the recording industry will be in court to have them shut down.

The problem is that the torrent files themselves actually contain no copywrited material. Tiny loophole there. ;)
 

Zim Hosein

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Super Moderator
Nov 27, 1999
65,357
404
126
Originally posted by: tm37
Originally posted by: Zim Hosein
Originally posted by: Lonyo
Originally posted by: cjgallen
Isn't Pirate Bay in Sweden?

By the way, we will NOT shut down the 1st of July.

Did you read that on TPB Lonyo? :confused:

Or is he the Pirate bay :eek:

TPB is back on-line after a hoax of being taken over by Swedish authorities :D