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Piracy Crime Media Movies The Courts The Internet United Kingdom

Four Year Sentence For Running Piracy Streaming Site 235

An anonymous reader writes: A 29-year-old man from Northern Ireland has been sentenced to two years in jail and another two "on license" for running a website from his bedroom that streamed pirated content. (Being on license is similar to a strict parole in the U.S.) Police say the man made over £280,000 from ads on the site . Law enforcement was put on the case by an anti-piracy group in the UK. Between 2008 and 2013, users of the site streamed approximately 12 million movies, which prosecutors say caused £12 million in damages. The judge in the case said time in jail was necessary "to show that behavior of this nature does not go unpunished."
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Four Year Sentence For Running Piracy Streaming Site

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  • very strange (Score:3, Insightful)

    by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Tuesday September 08, 2015 @07:23PM (#50483343)
    hmmmm unusual, the punishment, estimate of damages/losses actually seem reasonable for a change
    • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Tuesday September 08, 2015 @08:32PM (#50483753)
      At that amount they can't use their typical bollocks figures or they end up with a number that is quickly approaching the yearly GDP of the country.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        That didn't stop the RIAA claiming $75 trillion in damages. [slashdot.org] Granted they didn't ask for that much, but they claimed it was possible to under applicable laws.

        This guy's mistake was to enrich himself. Only commercial copyright infringement is punishable as a criminal offence. The guy running Oink's Pink Palace was found not guilty on all counts because he was doing it as a hobby and any ad revenue was used to run the site.

        • I don't know the cost of internet in the UK, but how fat a pipe do you need to make movie streaming to multiple parties possible? Anyone able to calculate this guy's expenses to run the site?

    • hmmmm unusual, the punishment, estimate of damages/losses actually seem reasonable for a change

      Add revenues: 280,000 pounds = $ 432,000 US.

      12 million streams @ $5 ea. = $60 million worth of licensed streams.

      ---- and when a movie is being streamed, I am going to assume that the downloader is sitting there watching it.

      That the excuses the geek trots out for his downloads from Pirate Bay don't make any sense here. What he wants is a free movie night and that is the end of it.

      12 million streams is an unlicensed wholesale distribution. If the real or intangible property being distributed on such a s

      • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

        12 million streams @ $5 ea. = $60 million worth of licensed streams.

        They they already determined 12M streams = £12M ie. about $18M (which seems about right - the content owners probably make about $1-3 on streaming rentals on average).

        But other than that, this is not sharing a few movies with friends, as you say this is wholesale criminal piracy for profit - he deserved what he got.

        • But other than that, this is not sharing a few movies with friends, as you say this is wholesale criminal piracy for profit - he deserved what he got.

          No, he didn't. He harmed no one, thus a jail sentence is unjust. Also, the company which made my coffee maker doesn't get paid every time I brew a cup, nor do they get to claim damages if I offer some to other people, nor do they get to demand a cut if I run a coffee shop. On what basis do record companies demand to be treated differently?

          Copyright law will n

          • Copyright law will never be respected because it's completely incompatible with humanity's evolved desire to share information.

            Eh, is it really? Patent law holds us back in that way, but copyright? Most of the copyrighted 'information' being illegally shared has little cultural value (even as a curiosity) and if it went away tomorrow, society would change only little and usually for the better.

            • by Rakarra ( 112805 )

              Copyright law will never be respected because it's completely incompatible with humanity's evolved desire to share information.

              Eh, is it really? Patent law holds us back in that way, but copyright? Most of the copyrighted 'information' being illegally shared has little cultural value (even as a curiosity) and if it went away tomorrow, society would change only little and usually for the better.

              Is this the old "Everything everyone else really likes is shit, I have much better taste" argument?

          • No, he didn't. He harmed no one, thus a jail sentence is unjust.

            Since he was doing this at scale for profit I think we're well beyond community service here, what would you recommend?

          • Interesting... your theory and $1 will get you a cup of coffee

          • I'm pretty liberal when it comes to both sentencing and piracy, but I can't agree in this case.

            So piracy is not theft, but there was clearly economic harm, in that he offered a service for profit that competed against other, licensed, for-profit services, and clearly drew some business. If someone steals your car, there are economic losses as well. Should car theft not be punished by jail time? If not, should any economic harm? I would argue that it should.

            Now, is the sentence just? I would say that tw

      • The question is how many of those 12m streams would have happened if they had to be sold? It's always easier to sell something for free (even if ads are involved). How much of what people watch on TV would be watched if they had to pay just a buck for it?

    • That means that bankers should be getting 20000 years in jail because the amount of fraud and theft they have committed are in the billions.
  • I'll do two years standing on my head for 280K.

    • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

      Not me. I don't know what prisons are like over there but in the USA I'd pay pretty much anything to stay out of prison. I'd sell everything I owned and give them my retirement and 401K account. I've seen enough of what these hell holes we call prisons are like and I'd kill anyone to stay out of one. If they ever come to get me to stick me in one of those cages it'll be a shootout like Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    • Or you could do 5 years as a free man and easily make that much. 55k/yr is well within reach of someone with even a HS education and average IQ.

  • ... movie industry should go into the fucking piracy business.

    • Uh, 280,000 pounds over five years isn't exactly rolling in it. Not if you have to pay the cost of actually making the movies.

  • but why not notpirate?
    • but why not notpirate?

      Because copyright law was nuisance in Industrial Age, but actively damages the productive potential of Information Age. Humanity as a whole can be thought of as a kind of distributed computer where each individual node (human) receives ideas, combines them with other received ideas to come up with slight variations, and passes those on to other humans to be further evaluated. Because bandwidth is limited, this requires an efficient compression algorithm, which in turn requires shared [wikipedia.org]

      • by verbatim ( 18390 )

        Nothing of what you said applies to streaming copies of Mad Max.

        Mad Max does not inform anything related to a shared knowledge base to build humanity.

        You should teach at a liberal-arts college. Your stupid ideas would fit in well.

  • Sure it does. If you're the CEO of a corporation or a politician it goes unpunished all the time.

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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