Friday, September 28, 2012

File-sharing for personal use declared legal in Portugal...

Hoping to curb the ever-increasing piracy figures in Portugal, local anti-piracy outfit ACAPOR reported the IP-addresses of 2,000 alleged file-sharers to the Attorney General last year. This week the Portuguese prosecutor came back with a ruling and decided not to go after the individuals connected to the IP-addresses. According to the prosecutor it is not against the law to share copyrighted works for personal use, and an IP-address is not enough evidence to identify a person.

Wearing T-shirts with the slogan “Piracy is Illegal”, the movie industry sponsored anti-piracy group ACAPOR delivered several boxes full of IP-addresses of alleged ‘illegal’ file-sharers to the Attorney General’s Office last year.

The “evidence” was handed over in two batches and the group demanded the authorities act against 2,000 alleged pirates.

“We are doing anything we can to alert the government to the very serious situation in the entertainment industry,” ACAPOR commented at the time, adding that “1000 complaints a month should be enough to embarrass the judiciary system.”

However, a year later it turns out that ACAPOR’s actions have backfired and the anti-piracy group is now facing the embarrassment. Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Switzerland put on US "watchlist" for not discouraging unauthorized file-sharing...
  2. Privacy triumphs in internet piracy test case in Switzerland...
  3. Swiss govt declares downloading for personal use legal...
  4. US government finally admits most piracy statistics are bullshit...
  5. How the music industry screws up young artists...
  6. The music industry abuses us and we're to blame...
  7. Music piracy: RIAA screws the artists...
  8. Three strikes anti-piracy budget "too expensive to justify," says French minister...

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