is about PLN50-60 (USD14-USD16.75). while the average wage in Poland is only PLN800-1200 per month.That's $224-$336USD of average wage.
Swedish prosecutors dropped charges relating to "assisting copyright infringement" leaving the lesser charges of "assisting making available copyright material" on trial day two.Pirate Bay co-founder Frederik Neik said it showed prosecutors had misunderstood the technology.The music industry played down the changes as "simplifying the charges".
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2009/02/prosecution-dro.htmlThe move may have been prompted in part by the defendants' opening statements. On Monday, Pirate Bay co-founder Fredrik Neij discussed so called "trackerless torrents," which use a Distributed Hash Table, or DHT, and don't rely on a torrent tracker at all."We believe he dropped charges after having googled all night about DHT," an upbeat Peter Sunde, one of the defendants, told Wired.com later.
<gmat>I have never understood how making something available is a criminal act. If I go to a public library and remove a copyrighted book from the shelf and then illegally Xerox a copy. Is the library responsible because it made it available?<Stewcanoe>I like the whole public library analogy.If I go to the public library, (which I have) and use the provided card file to find a book, (I have done this also) then take that book from the shelf and use the copier, (also conveniently provided by the library) to make copies from the illustrations in the book, (I plead the fifth) which I then frame and hang on my wall as art, (I am still pleading the fifth), is the library responsible for my, (alleged) copy write infringement?<Zakharov>The library, much like the VCR, the tape deck, the technology of bittorrent, youtube, google, and all the other analogies trotted out to defend TPB has significant LEGAL uses.A truly proper analogy would be a "LIBRARY" that calls itself "Free Books FTW", lets you come in and "borrow" a book, provides a free copier and paper, but does not allow you to read the book there, or take the book out of the library (thus preventing others from using it simultaneously.) A tortured "analogy" but analogies always suck for this issue.<ProfMobius>The analogy is nearly correct. The library "Free Books FTW" don't provide you with actual books, but with the address of people who have the book, and an address to a copy machine. It just keep a huge listing of all the address, and this is the only thing you can borrow out of this library.What you do with the addresses once you borrowed it is not of their concern anymore, as they are just pointing somewhere you can maybe get what you are looking for, or not, or you may don't go to the addresses at all. (More like a knife seller don't have to check you are not using your knife to kill anyone).
i probably have a 1% chance of ever winning in duel against you
This morning the founder of kat.cr was arrested in Poland. It's another attack on freedom and rights of internet users from all around the world. This is unacceptable!In the world where terrorist attacks is a monthly issue, where global corporations are swimming in money and millions dying because of diseases and hunger every single year, do you really think torrents deserve attention, money and human resources you spend on them? Do you really think it's the most important thing on our hands right now?Our freedom to share is the human right which Artem Vaulin has been providing to millions of users. By arresting him our rights are violated.