Archive for the ‘Special’ Category

Pirate Bay and isoHunt Respond to Google Search Result Punishment

Today we are beginning to see the first signs of Google’s announced punishment of “pirate” websites. The changes are resulting in lower search rankings for many file-sharing sites, but that doesn’t seem to bother The Pirate Bay. They are, however, disappointed that Google is giving in to the demands of the entertainment industries. The owner of fellow BitTorrent site isoHunt has gone a step further with a call for protest against antitrust bullying and censorship.

Last week Google announced that it would lower the search engine rankings of websites Image is Loading....that receive a high number of DMCA takedown requests, independent of whether the linked content is lawful or not.

The algorithm change is being implemented this week and it should severely degrade the rankings of websites such as The Pirate Bay and isoHunt. Today we are beginning to see the first signs that this is indeed the case.

A search for “The Dictator Download” returned several BitTorrent sites in the top results a few days ago, and now these have vanished entirely. While these results vary depending on people’s location and the search phrase, it could be the result of the algorithm change.

The “old” search results

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That said, BitTorrent sites are not completely absent from the search results. For example, replacing “download” with “torrent” brings them right back to the top. Nonetheless, incoming searches via Google should decrease.

In a response to Google’s announcement, The Pirate Bay crew say that they’re not too worried by these development. Only a small fraction of their traffic comes through Google, and they now expect more people to access the site directly.

“That Google is putting our links lower is in a way a good thing for us. We’ll get more direct traffic when people don’t get the expected search result when using Google, since they will go directly to TPB,” they write.

Traffic aside, The Pirate Bay is disappointed that Google is caving in to the “dictate” of Hollywood and the major music labels.

“The thing we don’t like with this is that a corrupt industry is deciding what another industry has to do. They’re dictating terms.”

“It’s really ironic: an industry that makes funny movies about dictators, where the dictator is essentially calling the USA a dictatorship, is trying to dictate terms where they have no place to do so….”

Another major BitTorrent site impacted by Google’s changes is isoHunt. In common with the sentiments at The Pirate Bay a traffic dip isn’t a major concern for isoHunt owner Gary Fung, but downranking perfectly legitimate search results is.

“What is really wrong with downranking/censoring websites based on ‘valid’ DMCA notices however is that what’s valid is simply notices that have not been countered,” Fung writes.

“With millions of links subject to notices, we never bothered countering any DMCA notices on Google. That does not mean all links under isohunt.com which Google has filtered by notices are valid, just because we haven’t countered them.”

Another problem Fung signals is that Google’s YouTube may be excluded from the downranking, even though it’s one of the top receivers of takedown requests.

“Sounds exactly like antitrust to me,” Fung says.

IsoHunt and others are keeping a close eye on the impact of the algorithm change to see how it impacts access to legal content. According to Fung, Google should be held accountable, and to that end he’s calling for protest.

“We need a protest against Google censorship and antitrust,” Fung notes.

At the moment it’s too early to measure the total impact of Google’s search update, but it’s clear that the last word hasn’t been said on the topic.

Largest BitTorrent Trackers Go Offline in Protest

OpenBitTorrent and PublicBitTorrent, the two largest BitTorrent trackers on the Internet, are on strike. Both trackers are going offline to protest the unresponsiveness of the makers of uTorrent who were asked to introduce a simple protocol enhancement that would save the non-profit trackers thousands of dollars. As a result of the protest, many people are having trouble downloading files on BitTorrent.

OpenBitTorrent (OBT) and PublicBitTorrent (PBT) are two non-profit BitTorrent trackers running on the beerware licensed Opentracker software. Neither service hosts or links to torrent files and both are free to use by all BitTorrent users.

The trackers are the two most-used BitTorrent trackers, and both are generally coordinating the downloads of tens of millions people at any given point in time. However, starting a few days ago the trackers stopped working entirely, and not without reason.

The admin of OpenBitTorrent informed us that both trackers are on strike. Both will remain offline until a solution is found for the massive waste of bandwidth that BitTorrent users generate as the result of incorrect tracker announces.

Trackers on Strike

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Both OBT and PBT abandoned TCP support to become UDP-only trackers last year. This was done to save resources. However, because many users keep adding HTTP addresses and since many old torrents also include these, both trackers are overloaded with bogus announces.

For OpenBitTorrent this means that more bandwidth and resources are wasted on erroneous traffic than on legitimate announces.

The same problem also hurts many torrent sites that don’t even operate a tracker. Many novice users add URLs of BitTorrent indexes to the “trackers” field when they generate a torrent. This results in a flood of unwanted traffic to these sites.

The issue has been brought to the attention of BitTorrent developers in the past, and two months ago Pirate Bay co-founder Fredrik Neij submitted an official proposal to the developer forum which is operated by uTorrent’s parent company BitTorrent Inc.

Neij’s proposal is to add a functionality that allows website and tracker owners to inform BitTorrent clients whether connections are allowed or not.

The operators of PublicBitTorrent, OpenBitTorrent and many others have welcomed the proposal, but weeks passed by without a comment from BitTorrent Inc. This prompted the operators of BitTorrent’s largest tracker to go on strike.

“We can’t keep paying for a shitload of boxes because they won’t implement simple policy features,” OpenBitTorrent’s admin told us. “PBT and OBT are on strike until the issue is resolved, we can’t continue to pay bills that are much higher than what they should be.”

OpenBitTorrent on Strike

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The bills are not the only problem either, as the admin points out that without a fix BitTorrent clients can be abused to DDoS any website.

“If you wanted to DDoS a website now with torrent clients, all you would have to do is hack a few torrent sites and add the URL of the site you want DDoSed to the torrents and magnet URLs they are displaying.”

For BitTorrent users, on the other hand, the strike of BitTorrent’s largest trackers is causing problems. Without central trackers it takes much longer to find peers, and users who don’t have DHT enabled will notice that their torrents stop working entirely if there is no backup tracker.

Luckily most torrent clients have DHT enabled by default, but there are hundreds of thousands of BitTorrent users out there who have it disabled.

We contacted BitTorrent Inc. before the weekend and asked them for a response to the proposal. We will add their statement to this article when it comes in, but for the time being BitTorrent users will have to do without the two largest trackers.

Pirate Bay Founder Submits Emotional Plea for Pardon

After being convicted for his role in operating The Pirate Bay, site co-founder Peter Sunde should soon serve eight month jail sentence in a Swedish prison. Serving this sentence would be a disgrace to the justice system and a personal disaster, says Sunde, who submitted an emotional plea for pardon to the Swedish authorities this week.

After his sentence was made final earlier this year, Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde was due to go prison early May.

However, due to various delays, he has yet to be committed to confinement.

This week in a final attempt to maintain his freedom, Sunde asked for a pardon. According to his lawyer, Sunde is suffering from serious mental health problems and being sent to prison would only worsen them.

It is further being reported that the head of the company where Sunde works – believed to be micro-payment company Flattr – has informed the court that if Sunde is imprisoned as planned, he will lose his job with the company.

Of most impact to those who have been following the Pirate Bay case, Sunde wrote the plea himself. The full 4000 word letter was published earlier this week on Sunde’s blog and has been translated to English by Rick Falkvinge.

“I ask pardon for a judicial system that has been steamrolled over by lobbyism and ignorance. But ultimately, I ask pardon for our future culture and communication. My case has significant impact on these,” Sunde starts his plea.

What follows is Sunde’s view on the controversial case – how he got involved in The Pirate Bay and how he was dragged into the criminal investigation and subsequently punished for crimes that never occurred.

Many of the issues mentioned by the former Pirate Bay spokesperson have been covered here before, but when they are put together it makes all the more impact. According to Sunde Hollywood went to extreme lengths to make an example out of him, while abusing the Swedish legal system.

While he understands that there’s a slim chance of getting what he wants, he ends the plea with a request for clemency.

“I know that I’m at a point where I have less than a tenth of a percent’s chance of escaping punishment. Not having to go to jail for crimes I didn’t commit. Crimes that weren’t even committed in the first place. Crimes that surely aren’t even crimes to begin with, if they had been committed, and if they had been committed, hadn’t been so by me. It’s a bizarre situation with my distance to any real criminal liability,” Sunde writes.

Sunde’s determinedness to stand up for his ideals of free sharing and culture have left emotional scars, but also bankrupted him.

“And once I’m out of jail, where I’m certainly going to become increasingly bitter over the situation, I have a debt of 100 million Swedish Kroner (11 million euro). Money in fantasy numbers, supposed to ‘compensate’ for aiding and abetting the assistance of a theoretically possible crime I’m supposed to have done by doing things that didn’t happen.”

“An economic debt to some of the world’s richest corporations. A debt that practically means I don’t have a future in Sweden as a country, if I want to live off of anything other than breadcrumbs or the goodwill of my friends. This debt is equivalent to exile, to deportation. I will need to become an economic refugee from Sweden,” Sunde adds.

The Pirate Bay co-founder ends by noting that while his conviction may please Hollywood, it goes against the will of the population. A population where millions are active users of The Pirate Bay. The pardon is also for them, according to Sunde.

“This bizarre situation is one that authorities in Sweden close their eyes to. It is an insult to everything the judicial system is supposed to represent. It is a shame for the entire population. A population that doesn’t even share the opinions behind the laws I’m convicted of breaking. And it’s these things that I ask that all of us be pardoned from,” Sunde writes.

“They lost faith in the justice system with all the bias, all the obvious corruption, the unconstitutional orders across branches of government that was never investigated, all the ugly tactics that have been used to satisfy a trading partner high on its own power. Sweden’s judicial system has sold out individuals. That is not supposed to happen in a democracy.”

“Grant the people of Sweden pardon from this corruption,” Sunde concludes.

 

5000+ Artists Line Up For a Pirate Bay Promotion

Record labels and Hollywood have described The Pirate Bay as one of the biggest threats to their business, but thousands of artists clearly disagree with this view. In recent weeks more than 5000 independent artists have signed up to be promoted by the world’s largest torrent site. Those who were lucky enough to be featured are overwhelmed by the career boost and the positive responses from the public.

Image is Loading......For many independent artists obscurity is a bigger problem than piracy, but it’s a problem that The Pirate Bay is trying to solve.Earlier this year the site rolled out a new promotion platform for filmmakers, musicians, writers and all other artists alike. To help them reach an audience of tens of millions of people, The Pirate Bay started offering the artists a prime advertising spot on the site’s homepage, replacing the iconic logo.

While The Pirate Bay team expected a decent response, they were positively surprised by the avalanche of submissions that have come in since. The Pirate Bay team informed us that thus far they have received more than 5000 applications. Nearly 90% come from musicians and 95% of them are male.

Artists who choose to participate have to offer something free in return and many artists from all over the world have done so. The list includes best-selling author Paulo Coelho who’s a big Pirate Bay supporter.

 

George Barnett, one of the artist who’s been featured worldwide

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“Thus far we’ve done 14 regular campaigns in 3 countries each and 8 worldwide promotions,” Pirate Bay’s Winston told us, who added that the initial plan has changed a bit due to the massive success.

“When we started the project the plan was to do a few worldwide promotions a year, but the submissions have been too good. So now we’re gonna do the worldwide promos every weekend and some regulars every now and then.”

For the artists the promotion campaigns are paying off as well. George Barnett added 4,000 new Facebook fans during the campaign and his video was viewed 85,000 times in total. And Tomás Vergara, the maker of short film The Chase, got 250,000 views of his video in just three days.

“When I had a reply saying that they liked it and I’d have a worldwide display on The Pirate Bay homepage, I pulled off my hair. I think its been a while since I’ve opened my eyes that wide,” Vergara said looking back at receiving the good news.

“Now The Chase is having massive exposure. I’m so damn happy. This is the kind of things you were not expecting in life, I guess,” he added.

While The Pirate Bay team is looking for quality content, they also want to cover a wide range of genres. In a few years The Pirate Bay hopes that a few of the artists they helped to promote will turn into independent stars.

“The future will show what the impact of the Pirate Bay promotions is. I’m absolutely certain that at least 2 or 3 of them have become superstars by then,” The Pirate Bay’s Winston told us.

However, making stars is not the most important.

For the Pirate Bay the main goal is to give something back to the creators of this world. Give them an honest push instead of exploiting artists’ copyrights for commercial gains, as they say the major record labels do.

“We’re one of the worlds top 60 sites in the Internet. This brings us a responsibility to use the site to do something good. When I think about it, it’s insane that all the other top 100 sites only blast ads and self-centered stuff on their front pages. ”

“We do this for fun and for the love of culture, so we’re everything the major labels are not.”

Artists who are interested in getting featured are welcome to apply, but due to the success getting signed with a major record label might be easier.

Megaupload Seizure Order “Null and Void” Says High Court

In another astonishing development in the Megaupload saga, a judge in New Zealand’s High Court has declared the order used to seize Kim Dotcom’s assets as “null and void”. The blunder, which occurred because the police applied for the wrong type of court order, means that the Megaupload founder could have his property returned.

Just when it seemed that the handling of the Megaupload case couldn’t get any more Image is Loading....controversial, a development from New Zealand has taken things to the next level.

Following the raids on Kim Dotcom’s mansion in January, police seized millions of dollars worth of property belong to the Megaupload founder. But thanks to a police blunder, he could now see all of those assets returned.

On Friday, Justice Judith Potter in the High Court declared the order used to seize Dotcom’s property “null and void” after it was discovered that the police had acted under a court order that should have never been granted.

The error dates back to January when the police applied for the order granting them permission to seize Dotcom’s property. Rather than applying for an interim restraining order, the Police Commissioner applied for a foreign restraining order instead, one which did not give Dotcom a chance to mount a defense.

According to New Zealand Herald, on January 30th prosecution lawyer Anne Toohey wrote to the court explaining that the wrong order had been applied for and detailed five errors with the application.

Justice Potter said that police commissioner Peter Marshall tried to correct the error by applying for the correct order after the raids were completed and retrospectively adding the Image is Loading....items already seized.

Although the correct order was eventually granted albeit on a temporary basis, Potter said she will soon rule on whether the “procedural error” will result in Dotcom having his property returned.

The Crown is arguing that since the new order was granted the earlier error no longer matters, but Dotcom’s legal team framed it rather differently by describing the seizure of assets as “unlawful”.

Whether the assets are returned will rest on Dotcom’s legal team showing a lack of “good faith” in connection with the blunder. A hearing to decide if the assets will be returned will take place next week.

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