The Pirate Bay Trial
Sam, on host 198.51.119.157
Monday, April 20, 2009, at 15:08:19
The circle of copyrights, copy protection, and cracking has fascinated me since the 1980s, when software used to be sold on copy protected floppy disks you had to boot to use. The world and the media war has evolved a lot since then, although the same underlying principles on both sides remain unchanged.
I am fascinated by the story of The Pirate Bay. The Pirate Bay is a torrent tracking web site. It's approximately the 100th most popular web site on the Internet. It is headquartered in Sweden, although the servers that the site runs from are located in several different countries, including Thailand, Russia, and Belgium.
What's unusual about it is that it's been around for a long time, as these things go. The usual cycle is for a web site like this to cave in to legal threats after a year or two and shut down. Then everybody moves on to some other place, which in turn dies out in a year or two. To a lesser extent, technologies go the same way.
But The Pirate Bay has been unusually resilient, and it's not that the powers that be haven't noticed. On the contrary, TPB has been inundated with cease-and-desist letters from corporations, which the owners of the site proudly publish and mock for their readers. (Just visit the "legal threats" link from their main page.)
A couple of years ago, TPB was subject to a police raid. The TPB folks alleged that the raid was the result of pressure from U.S. government officials and the MPAA. Gagillions of equipment was confiscated, although the owners of the site were only held briefly for questioning. The net result of the raid was that The Pirate Bay web site went down for three days. After the raid, the MPAA issued a press release proclaiming a great victory, and then the site was back up and running again.
More recently, the four guys behind TPB were arrested and tried in a Swedish court for "promoting other people's infringements of copyright laws." A day into the trial, the prosecution dropped the charges of "assisting copyright infringement," keeping only the charges of "assisting making available," which is a distinction I don't quite understand but seems to be rooted in the nature of BitTorrent technology. At any rate, last Friday a guilty verdict came in for all four, and they are now fined almost a million dollars each and sentenced to a year in jail. That's not final. In Sweden, the charges don't take effect until all appeals have been processed. There are two higher courts that the defendants can appeal to. If they'd won, the prosecution would certainly have appealed, so this case was going to go up the chain anyway.
The aftermath fascinates me. On file sharing blogs and stuff, the outcry is loud and long. There are claims that the judge was bought. There are defiant resolutions about never buying movies or music from media companies again. (Which is hilarious: aren't these the people NOT buying them in the first place?) Many of the commenters don't have a shred of legal sense. One said, hey, they do their year in jail, and then they can't be tried again for the same crime! So The Pirate Bay will live on! Er, no, dude, each *instance* of "promoting other people's infringements of copyright law" is a separate crime. Otherwise someone convicted of armed robbery would get future armed robberies for free. But never mind.
As for the four owners of The Pirate Bay, the attitude is of resilient defiance. One of them has asked fans, who have sent anonymous donations to help with the fines, to stop sending him money -- because they are refusing to pay any fines whatsoever. Furthermore, the site has not suffered any downtime at all. Throughout the trial, the TPB crew have been saying that no matter how it turns out, the site will remain up. It's easy to believe them, considering how redundant and international the site's server network is.
Why does this story intrigue me so? On the surface of it, I don't have a huge vested interest in the outcome. I cannot rouse much of any sympathy for EITHER side. Copyright infringement is wrong, and copyright holders are legally and ethically entitled to sell or license their content in whatever manner they see fit, be that manner fair or exploitative to the consumer. Whether the TPB crew are legally guilty of anything (I'm no expert on the nuances of Swedish or international copyright law), they are certainly not ethically in the clear.
On the other hand, the media companies, especially in the last several years, have been cheap bullies, plain and simple, going completely overboard with restrictions on what private citizens can't do with what they've been sold, making lawsuits, grossly exaggerating the estimates of revenues lost to piracy for the purpose of political power, and regularly screw over the creators of the content they license and sell. (That writer's strike from a year ago? The studios basically won that.)
The other side of the coin is that copyright law is far too strict in the U.S. (I don't know about internationally.) Copyrights are good in that they protect content creators, but too much copyright stifles creativity. If society is to achieve its maximum potential as a free-flowing exchange of ideas, people have to be able to build off other people's work. Ideas are never created in a vacuum. Every intellectual creation was born out of other people's creations. Thus, what is best for the individual is not necessarily best for society as a whole. As a rule, I tend to favor individuals' rights over society's rights, but there is still a balance that should be struck. Artists must have a financial incentive to create, plus the freedom to explore ideas as much as possible. Author's life plus 75 years, which is currently how long a copyright lasts, is absurd. And it's probably worse than that. Every time some big moneymaking property gets near to falling into the public domain, mysteriously the law changes to extend the copyright term. Insidious.
With regard to the rights of private citizens, is it really sensible for a media company to tell you you can't have a personal backup of the content you purchase? DVDs/CDs are cheap enough as they are. The smallest scratch can render the whole disk unusable, in which case you might as well have set fire to the money you spent on it. More ambiguously, are the modern equivalent of mix tapes really such a huge threat to the survival of recording studios?
DRM is outright oppressive. Basically, you buy a song, and then you need to get permission every time you want to play it, or put it somewhere. Upgrade your computer too many times, and you won't be recognized as you anymore. Might as well toss that song in the recycle bin. Admittedly, if a consumer AGREES to a purchase encumbered by DRM, understanding the limitations, then that's his own fault. But when the media companies join forces (which is what the RIAA is; the MPAA is the equivalent for movie studios) to enforce constraints on the consumer, isn't this EXACTLY like workers' unions, only the other way around? Yes, it is (and should be) legally permissible for corporations to form alliances, but there needs to be a way for consumers to fight back.
The clincher is that piracy is easy to throttle: Admittedly, you can't stop it completely, but if you want to reduce it, you DON'T encumber media with copy protection, and you don't throw around lawsuits and lobby for stricter laws. It's counterproductive. Technical challenges merely whet the appetite of a technology enthusiast fighting for his rights as a consumer. The irony is that software companies LEARNED THIS ALREADY in the 1980s. They figured out that once copy protection got too good, sales dropped off. More and more software started being sold without copy protection, simply because it made good business sense to do so.
All you have to do to stem piracy is this: Treat your customers fairly. Make your content available and affordable. By and large, people prefer to do the legal thing. Most people will only turn to piracy when they feel the alternative is to let themselves be screwed over. The record companies got slammed by piracy because they wanted you to spend $20 on a music album (when introductory prices for CDs were higher than for tapes, the promise was that the price point would come down once more people adopted the new technology, but prices stayed where they were) even if you only wanted a single song. After years of unsuccessfully fighting online downloads, iTunes saved the industry and revitalized Apple in a single stroke. It wasn't the full answer: iTunes was laden with DRM and clunky software, but it was such a huge step in the right direction that it was a good long while before consumers started seeing iTunes as evil. And now iTunes is going DRM-free, another incredibly correct decision.
That, however, is an easier thing to say than to enact. The internationality of the Internet muddies the picture on both sides. Making content available at reasonable prices is much easier to do within a nation than internationally, when you're up against not just differing legal environments but wholly different cultures. Movie studios can't do a lot to stem piracy in China, because the primary impetus for it is the Chinese government preventing legal availability. Most American movies aren't allowed a legal release in China. And so, obviously, the black market is booming -- to the point where now it's not just a legal matter but a cultural one as well.
Back to The Pirate Bay. Can it be stopped? I highly doubt it. I don't know how it *would* be shut down, since it's so international. All you can do is remove the reason for people to go there and support the site in the first place.
So who do I root for in this case? The side with the ethical rights is also the side screwing over honest consumers. But that doesn't mean it's okay to steal intellectual property, which also stifles creativity and robs artists. It's a contentious area, and I'm sure I'll be making enemies of both sides by not committing to either one. But I've heard a lot of rants and raves from both sides, and I am convinced that the more loyally committed one is to one side or the other, the less that person truly understands the issues at hand.
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