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#121 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#122 |
eBook Enthusiast
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English law is relevant here because it is English law that has seemingly been broken. If they are not breaking Swedish law that's fine - they are presumably free to operate in Sweden.
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#123 |
Grand Sorcerer
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But you are calling them criminals. That is the issue. You do not become a criminal if you break strange laws in other countries.
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#124 |
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#125 |
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No. No. No. The Pirate Bay is a tool for the distribution of digital files, it may be used to commit piracy (and I won't argue the fact that it is used for that purpose a lot). Just like roads are tools used to transport people and goods, and they may be and are used to commit crimes, should we block those too?
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#126 | |
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Quote:
This isn't an easy case unfortunately because of the worldwide nature of the web, and the obvious difficulty in prosecuting people in the UK because of a website based in Sweden. That said though, I don't think the answer to those difficulties is website blocking. Last edited by Ninjalawyer; 05-03-2012 at 11:29 AM. |
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#127 |
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Oh, I thought you used "criminals" in a legal way. If it was just an arbitrary insult then I have no objections as long as the word does not mean that they have done anything that is illegal in the country they have dont it.
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#128 |
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By all means please regard it as an "arbitrary insult"
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#129 | |
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#130 | |
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#131 | ||
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Quote:
I hate to quote something at such length, but one of the commenters on a story at Techdirt (here) posted the finest summary of the case that I've yet seen: Quote:
Last edited by Ninjalawyer; 05-03-2012 at 01:23 PM. |
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#132 | |
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The printing press analogy fails because they aren't printing lots of different things, some of which are illegal, almost all of the material they aid in distributing is illegal, and that is the focus of the site, hence the name. Part of the finding in these cases has been that is that there is no significant non-infringing content. That is why 'normal' sites, where a small proportion of content was infringing, would not be addressed in the same way. |
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#133 |
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#134 | |
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As I said in the passage of mine you quoted, my discomfort comes from the fact that The Pirate Bay wasn't involved in this investigation and, in fact, there was no criminal investigation; the finding was made in a civil case, not a criminal case. I don't necessarily disagree with blocking a website, if it is done through a process that ensures the affected parties can present evidence and make arguments and where the trier of facts balances the cost of suppressing the speech against the benefit. With respect to the printing press analogy, I'm not going to get into an argument about it; analogies by their nature are imperfect, so mine wasn't without its faults. Although, as I have already pointed out a few times, there are in fact large sections of The Pirate Bay devoted to non-infringing content. And while The Pirate Bay may be "devoted" to infringing content, it doesn't actually appear that they host anything infringing or illegal; that is a determination for a UK criminal court to make, not the two of us arguing on a forum. Last edited by Ninjalawyer; 05-03-2012 at 01:44 PM. |
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#135 |
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Actually, there are people who rather dislike the police preventing people from entering their street unless they are residence because they feel that it is an infringement on peoples right to come and go as they please. The police are doing it in order to deter crime in areas that have seen an increase in crime but not everyone who lives on that street is a criminal or planning on engaging in a crime. There simply is a higher likelihood based on current trends.
And it has not ruled illegal, I don't think it has ever gone to court even though it is unpopular. My point? There are times that the legal system is engaged because there is enough evidence of a criminal trend that it is deemed to be in the benfit of the public to make it harder for criminal activity to occur or to catch the folks who are engaged in criminal activity. I don't think anyone has ever said that road blocks to identify drunk drivers are illegal or unjust. I don't know that they have ever been challenged in court. I do know that the major television stations and radio stations, the ones using public air waves, have far more stringent limitations on what they can show and not show during certain hours of the day then cable channels because the air waves are public. The government limits speech in this case to benefit people. ie young kids should not be watching porn on CBS, NBC, ABC, FOX or the like because we deem that to be bad and those stations are using public airwaves but Playboy can show porn when it wants. So there are precedents (sp) for public owned goods (roads, airwaves) being restricted in order to benefit the public. In the case of the roads, there is a precedent for restricting the use in order to arrest the few people who are engaged in criminal activities while inconviencing everyone who is not, ie those of us not drunk, not on drugs, wearing our seatbelts, and driving with insurance. Nevermind that free speech means that speech comes without consequences. You are free to yell fire in a crowded movie theatre when there is no fire and you will find yourself in jail for doing so because your speech created a dangerous situation. You are free to post what you want on the internet and then be charged with a crime, witness the idiots who posted about stealing a penguin and returning him before the theft was discovered. They still ended up paying a fine because they used their free speech to post on it. Or the people who have been arrested for inciting a riot even when they did not participate in the London riots because they posted on Twitter and Facebook encouranging others to do so or told people where to go. As my high school rights and responsibility teacher said "Your rights end where my nose begins." You are not allowed to use your rights in such a manner that they hinder my rights. Clearly the UK Courts have determined that The Pirate Bay infringes on the rights of the copyright holders and others who are being screwed out of the money they are owed for selling their goods by The Pirate Bay. You might not agree with the decision but I don't buy the censorship argument for one second. |
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