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View Full Version : Swedish police take down Sunnydale


View Full Version : Swedish police take down Sunnydale


Miniver
March 9th, 2009, 12:03 AM
Police in 'biggest ever' piracy raid

Published: 6 Mar 09 17:44 CET
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/18050/20090306/

Police in the Stockholm area have seized a computer server believed to contain the largest quantity of pirated material ever discovered in Sweden.

The raid took place during the recent high profile Pirate Bay trial. The server was located in the Brandbergen neighbourhood south of Stockholm and was part of a Nordic file sharing ring known as Sunnydale, according to the Swedish Anti-Piracy Agency (Antpiratbyrån), a private copyright advocacy group.

The confiscated computer contained data equivalent to 16,000 movies, making it the biggest ever seizure in the country, the agency said.

"The well-organized pirates on the scene seem to have an inflated sense of their own ability to conceal themselves, but this raid shows that we can get to them. Copyright applies to the internet too and we will continue to prioritize efforts to counteract these well-organized groups," said Anti-Piracy Agency lawyer Henrik Pontén in a statement.

The Sunnydale ring consists of 10 servers, together containing some 65 terabytes of pirated material ranging from movies and music to television series and computer games, the agency said.

Pontén said the server ring had collapsed as a direct result of the raid.

Speaking to newspaper Svenska Dagbladet, he also claimed that the Sunnydale ring was the source of all pirated material available on The Pirate Bay.

But this claim was disputed by The Pirate Bay's Peter Sunde.

"More than 800,000 people have uploaded to The Pirate Bay, so I don't believe it's the source of everything. But it is possible that it's a major source," he told Svenska Dagbladet.

One of the people suspected of responsibility for the server has admitted to some degree of involvement, according to the Anti-Piracy Agency, which said police were continuing with their investigations to trace the identities of those operating the server.

DrewWilson
March 9th, 2009, 12:31 AM
Wow, that sucks. Now some of these people will have to spend a week looking for another dump site.

Though, come to think of it, the anti-piracy organizations haven't knocked out a dump site in years, have they? I don't really recall there being any dump sites being knocked out in 2008, only a couple of French release groups.

YWD67
March 9th, 2009, 02:57 AM
65 terabytes, wow! That is absolutely so unimpressive that it is boring.
This wasn't an attempt at grandstand during the PB trail was it?
Has anyone had trouble finding anything they were looking for yet on the net?

Theinfamousone
March 9th, 2009, 11:05 AM
It's scary how moronic some of these people are.

Do they even know what bittorrent is? No single person or group for that matter contains everything that's on pirate bay, you can't even be the sole owner of a file once it's released, that's the whole point, anyone who wants to download it is sharing parts of it with everyone else. This whole thing made absolutely no sense. I wonder if this is just total bogus propaganda. Even if they were sharing all 65 TBs. They would have to be cranking some serious bandwidth to make any difference in download speeds since trying to decrease the speed is a negative feedback loop as the more you try to slow it down, the longer people have to upload the file their downloading, which speeds it back up. Most people don't even care how long it takes to download stuff since it's done while they're sleeping, or at work/school or whatever and they're just watching when they get some time.

DrewWilson
March 9th, 2009, 11:24 AM
Agreed. They're clearly trying to pin this, somehow, on TPB, but in truth, the files would have wound up just as easily elsewhere.