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Download: The Movies

Published Thursday 6th March 2008 07:02 GMT

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Traffic Drop 

By Ralph B
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 08:02 GMT
Unhappy

> According to SMÁÍS, the raid was directly responsible for a 40 per cent drop in

> Iceland's net traffic volumes.

If only we could get plod to treat spammers the same way.

2.5 TB? 

By Andy Worth
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 08:17 GMT
Coat

That's a lot of porn....

I remember the days when you were lucky to find a tatty old bongo mag somewhere just outside the school grounds.....ahh them were the days.....when your biggest worry as a kid was the school bully.

Mine's the one next to that zimmer frame.

ISK conversion... 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 09:50 GMT

...according to EVE-online, this should cost them about £3.04 if they buy 100mil ISK from Ebay; if I were them I'd have a think about seeing if the courts would accept a virtual currency.

It wasnt a win for p2p 

By User
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 09:57 GMT
Thumb Down

SMAIS got its point through that "making available" is punishable, which really is a corruption of the law that states "distribute".

2.5 TB? 

By Slaine
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 10:09 GMT
Paris Hilton

Illicit material... mmm??? that could be nothing more than a sizable collection of mp3's at 320bps, a modest 50 DVD images... or perhaps 2500 copies of "One night in Paris".

A lot of porn? 

By Michael
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 10:37 GMT
Thumb Up

Not in these halcyon days of Hi-Def.

Re: 2.5TB 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 11:16 GMT
Pirate

-Slightly over 51 of the largest possible Blu-Ray images.

-Close to 600 DVD-Rs

-320 8GB iPhones (sorry!)

Not *that* much these days - about 4 years ago, we had DC at Uni, and there were people on the hub with >3TB shared! Needless to say, the uni network admins were less than happy about the amount of bandwidth it was eating and shut it down pronto.

Full Judgement 

By frank denton
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 11:45 GMT

I had a look at the full judgement (In Icelandic) just to see what Icelandic looked like. I noticed that it listed what I assume is the equipment confiscated from each defendant. (This in great detail - Logitech Mouse, Viewsonic flatscreen etc).

Was this a simple admin list of equipment the Iceplods had confiscated (you can get lots of movies stored inside a Logitech mouse as everyone knows) or was it presented as formal evidence of their guilt?

I have an image in my mind of a hyped up junior prosecutor waving a Netgear switch around in front of the jury as part of his summing up speech - "See this!! do normal law-abiding citizens have this sort of thing in their house?"

I'll hope for a native Icelander to advise on this (or a skilled reader of Icelandic).

Further, will the confiscated equipment be returned to them, since like a car or a house or a knife, it is multi-purpose equipment which is readily available, for money, just about anywhere?

mmmmmmm..... 

By Paul
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 11:58 GMT
Paris Hilton

2.5TB of porn :-)

Bandwidth 

By Shabble
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 12:03 GMT

On the one hand, these guys are sucking up bandwidth that could be used by people trying to watch 'Family Guy' clips on youtube. On the other hand, demand drives innovation and if it wasn't for P2P most European nations would probably still be stuck with 2Mbps max bandwidth anyway.

The irony here is that most people who pay for the top bandwidth packages are doing so because of P2P. When Virgin upgrade everyone's bandwidth for free, its largely down to P2P filesharing. The downloaders may be cheating the recording industry, but they are subsidising the ISP industry.

If we do see ISPs banning P2P traffic, your existing broadband bandwidth will be more likely to hit max... but it will be more expensive to upgrade in the future, and it will take longer for 100Mbps to be rolled out throughout the country.

Re: frank denton 

By Spleen
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 12:57 GMT

"Is this the sort of specialised network equipment you would expect your wife or servants to use?"

re: 320 8GB iPhones (sorry!) 

By Slaine
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 13:00 GMT

I accept... please don't do iT again.

And yes - it was far too early for me to do anything other than take a wild guess for the numbers I used. It felt "about" right, it was a factor of 10 out - iBad. Perhaps I should have opted for statistics instead.

The equipment. 

By User
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 15:57 GMT
Thumb Down

The equipment they owned was confiscated. That really was the sum of the punishment. Why mice and keyboards and such were taken by the police is beyond me.

On the scale of Icelandic justice this was a pretty harsh judgement. You get smaller fines for aggravated assaults round here.

Also, like I said before the major defeat for 21. century computing was that "making available" was made punishable. The law says otherwise, but in the future weak willed judges in Iceland are going to look back on this ruling for support.

It also says in the ruling 

By Jón Frímann Jónsson
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 17:00 GMT
Pirate

The Smáís did use an guy that did share stuff, with permission from them in order to spy on them on the people how where sentenced by the court.

The district court doesn't appear to have looked at that info. Even if the person in question (that was sharing and spying) did testify in court what it was doing. The thing is that it is illegal to do something that tricks people into breaking the law. But that was done in this case none the less. Today I don't think he is going to spy on anyone, as his ip range has been made public and I believe that it is now banned everywhere where there is an p2p site (torrent today).

The people how got convicted are going to appeal to high court according to the news in Iceland.

The person that did the spying is also connected to the istorrent case. But apparently he was doing the Smáís dirty job by collecting data on istorrent and forwarding them to Smáís. So they can start the sue things. I hope that this method gets under fire soon, as Smáís isn't a law force and private investigators are illegal in Iceland.

Smáís is the evil hand of MPA/A here in Iceland.

ISK? 

By Ash
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 17:12 GMT
Dead Vulture

My Rifter cost more than that fitted.

A lot more.

Smáís is just 

By Mectron
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 22:43 GMT
Flame

another branch of the Digital Mafia (RIAA/MPAA).

The proof was obtained illegally (break and enter)

a IP address on a log file is not even a proof, so the case was not even adimissble in court in the 1st place

How many iceland movies was actually in the 2,5 tb?

This is just another proof that the most dangerous criminal cartel in the world is still very active in it's never ending quest to steal more money from everyone and no country is safe from corruption.

Note to Hacker:s The Pentagon might be a nice target, but if you want to be a Hero, the MPAA/RIAA is a much better "social" target then anything else

Much ado 

By b166er
Posted Thursday 6th March 2008 23:59 GMT

According to Andrew Orlowski, Freetards are taking over, whilst in other news, Trent Reznor sold out of his £300 pound option in a little over a day, netting him around £750,000. The MPAA have posted a bumper year and admitted to cooking the books threefold in relation to the college file-sharing pandemic. Crikey, it certainly looks like these artists are soon to be destitute because of these freetards, eh ;p

2.5TB, is that one empirical freetard?

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