Pirate Bay ordered to shut down by Dutch court

The former operators of popular file-sharing site The Pirate Bay have been given another ultimatum by a Dutch court – shut the site down or face hefty fines.

The court yesterday ordered that three of the site’s founders must block traffic between The Pirate Bay and the Netherlands in the next 10 days or face fines of $51,000 per day, each day it remains online, despite the site’s home being in Sweden.

While The Pirate Bay was ordered to be shut down in April by a Swedish court, and its founders sentenced to one year in prison, the site still operates online with copyrighted material available for download.

The Dutch court ordered the founders “each separately and together, to stop and keep stopped the infringements on copyright and related rights of Stichting Brein in the Netherlands”.

“Stichting Brein” refers to a Dutch organisation funded by several groups that hold the rights to popular copyrighted material, some of which appears on The Pirate Bay.

The three founders to whom the case refers, Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Warg, have reportedly sent a letter back to the court requesting a dismissal and are apparently seeking legal representation.

The court order is the latest in a string of problems for the site. Earlier this week 13 Hollywood production studios grouped together in a new legal challenge against the site, seeking to have it shut down.

“We have filed a complaint against The Pirate Bay because they have not stopped their activities after they were sentenced to prison,” the studios’ lawyer Monique Wadsted told AFP.

The Pirate Bay continues to operate while its new owner, Swedish firm Global Gaming Factory, prepares to transition it into a legal site where users operate on a “give and take” model for material.

 

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