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Pirate Bay planning YouTube competitor

Pirate Bay to stream videos, unbowed and unbroken

Pirate Bay to stream videos, unbowed and unbroken

Pirate Bay to stream videos, unbowed and unbroken

Site will stream video ignoring copyright

Stephen Pate, NJN Network, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada, June 29, 2009 with story from BBC

BBC News is reporting plans byThe Pirate Bay to start a video streaming site competing with YouTube. That will be a gutsy move considering their recent conviction for copyright infringement. Four of the founders were jailed and ordered to pay a $4.5 million fine. After the conviction it was revealed that the judge was in conflict of interest over his relationship with copyright bodies in Sweden. The case is being appealed.

The Pirate Bay is one of the most popular download sites for videos and music. It uses the BitTorrent format which started as a gorilla system and now has gone mainstream.

While the media copyright holders would dearly love to contain the Internet, it is a lost cause. Millions of people download royalty free content daily. The horse is out of the barn. Exclusive rights to media, as envisaged by copyright laws, is a lost cause. However, the copyright owners have plenty of opportunities for revenue and profit. Downloaded movies are not a movie theatre experience. Nor do stereo mp3 even touch the live concert experience. Content producers are slowing coming to grips with multiple formats in the Internet age. They will still make ridiculously high profits. As one wag wryly commented: they may need to move to the cheaper brands of cocaine.

“It is not clear when the service will actually go live; the site’s founders said “it will be done when it’s done”.

In April, a court in Sweden jailed four men behind The Pirate Bay and ordered them to pay $4.5m (£3m) in damages.

Speaking by video link to the Open Video Conference in New York, TBP founder Peter Sunde said the service would use the latest HTML 5 features.

“More specifically the and tags with the ogg/theora video and audio formats,” he said.

“This site will be an experimental playground and as such subjected to both live and drunk encoding, so please don’t bug us too much if the site isn’t working properly,” he added.

Speaking to the BBC, the head of Sweden’s Pirate Party, Rickard Falkvinge, said this was another step in a “prolonged legal battle with the record industry”.

“It’s obvious that, given enough time, The Pirate Bay will win this war which will go on as long as the record industry has yet another penny to file a lawsuit.

“I think they [The Pirate Bay] are taking an important part in that battle, fighting for freedom of expression and culture against monopolistic companies,” he added. BBC News”

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Except where otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons License – NJN Network Inc.

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