neij
Music Labels Won’t Share Pirate Bay Loot With Artists
February this year, Sweden’s Supreme Court announced its decision not to grant leave to appeal in the long-running criminal case against the founders of The Pirate Bay. This meant that the previously determined..."What we do is good": Pirate Bay lashes out as Swedish lawsuit finally ends
The Swedish lawsuit against four of The Pirate Bay's previous administrators concluded today as the country's Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal . Jail sentences and fines against the group now become...Appeals court: Pirate Bay Admins Still Guilty, Now With Higher Fines
Three of the admins behind The Pirate Bay are all still guilty, a Swedish appeals court decided on Friday, but their jail time has been reduced. Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde, and Carl Lundstrom’s...The Pirate Bay Appeal Verdict: Guilty Again
The verdict against three people associated with The Pirate Bay just been announced. The Swedish Appeal Court found Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij and Carl Lundström guilty of “contributory copyright infringement” and handed down prison...The Pirate Bay Appeal Day 2: Lost Sales
The Pirate Bay appeal is moving forward faster than expected. On the second day representatives for the music and movie industries talked about lost sales and revenues they claim can be attributed to The...Exclusive Usenet Offers: $7.95/month
Usenet Tips
Net News
- A Year And 20 Million Takedown Requests Later, The Music Industry Is Still Grieving
- IP Addresses Don’t Positively Identify Infringers, Anti-Piracy Lawfirm Says
- Film Industry Interested in New Anti-Piracy Device Developed by Kerala Software Engineer
- WikiLeaks Donations Down to a Trickle
- Kim Dotcom Claims Ownership of Two-Factor Authentication
- Twitter Amplify Offers Real-Time Videos in Its Stream
- Hurt Locker Makers Sue Attorney for Being “Prolific” BitTorrent Pirate
- Kim Dotcom to Google, Twitter, Facebook: I Own Security Patent, Work With Me
- Piictu App Slated to Shut Down Services May 31
- RIAA: 20 Million Piracy Takedowns Sent to Google, Still No End in Sight


