Court Goes Censorship Crazy Against Dutch Pirate Party

from the whac-whac-whac-a-mole dept

We’ve been covering the attempts by Dutch anti-piracy operator BREIN to play a legal game of whac-a-mole to block The Pirate Bay by forcing ISPs to block access, then blocking proxies that provide access, and now blocking anyone from even talking about ways to get to The Pirate Bay. Bizarrely, a court in The Hague has agreed, and has come out in favor of blocking the Dutch Pirate Party from even discussing some of this stuff:

The Court specifically ruled that the Party’s reverse proxy has to remain offline. It was further ordered that Pirate Bay domains and IP-addresses have to be filtered from the Pirate Party’s generic proxy. In addition the Pirate Party can’t link to other websites that allow the public to bypass the blockade. These orders are only valid when paired with an encouragement to circumvent.

Basically, telling people how to get around a block, even if it’s linking to a general proxy (not a specific one) is now barred in the Netherlands. The fact that the court now is telling proxies how they can work is a huge overreach. That seems like a pretty blatant restriction on free speech. The thing is, do the folks at BREIN actually think this charade is effective? All it seems to be doing is enraging tons of people in the Netherlands, and doing absolutely nothing to stop them from going to The Pirate Bay.

Filed Under: , , , , ,
Companies: the pirate bay

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Court Goes Censorship Crazy Against Dutch Pirate Party”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
30 Comments
Squig (profile) says:

Elections in September

Since the Dutch governing coalition broke two weeks ago there will are upcoming elections on September 12th. The PPNL is at 1% in the polls without having started campaigning, this may come back to hurt Brein / the efforts of the MPAA and RIAA in the Netherlands big time.
Noteworthy is also that the Netherlands are the first country in Europe to have passed a net neutrality law – one day before the verdict against PPNL was issued.

Anonymous Coward says:

BREIN are only interested in getting their own way, like the rest of the entertainment industries and their lackeys. it seems they have managed to get the Dutch court to remove all forms of civil liberties. i dont know whether the Pirate Party will take this matter further, but it certainly appears they have to. giving in now will surely be a big mistake. with other ISPs in Holland being forced to ban access to TPB as well now, i wonder when this madness will end and what will have been lost in the mean time. i also wonder if those at BREIN and similar organisations realise that they are also losing the same civil liberties as they are getting taken from everyone else and wonder what the circumstances will be that makes them realise what they have done. in this sort of situation, overall, there really are no winners!

Anonymous Coward says:

Best Way To Fight Back

I think one of the most effective ways to fight back is to contact distributors, i.e.-Amazon, Best Buy, etc. and tell them as long as they carry RIAA/MPAA company affiliated products (CD’s, DVD’s etc.) that you will no longer do business with them. If enough people complain, they will pressure the RIAA/MPAA to lay off. Money talks.

Anonymous Coward says:

…This is like telling a teenager not to access porn. The more you insist on it, the more effort they’ll put into doing it to spite you.

Does this judge think he can keep non-Dutch sites from explaining how to reach TPB? And if not, how does he expect this ruling to be anything but a farce? The internet does not stop at the border and politely check in with the guards.

Drew (profile) says:

They could just embed a text document in a image. Make it the leader of BREIN and load it up with a list of proxies,torrent sites,usenet, or anything else that would help 😛

It would be great to have the BREIN leader knowing that every image of him on the net possibly has a rar inside it packed with YOU GOT F’D IN THE A stop! HAMMER TIME

I’ve been testing sites just out of curiosity to see how much data I can store inside one with no errors. Any site with image compression will not work but there are plenty out there. The best I’ve found so far is 35 megs but I’m sure I will find a better one soon. Big enough to pack TPBs whole site into.

Then you could be like WOW THAT BREIN DUDE IS COOL AS HELL he’s hiding treasure in his images!!!

Beech (profile) says:

I think it would be fun if the Pirates obeyed the order entirely…by linking to a page which linked to proxies. “Hey, want to get to the piratebay? These guys will tell you how”

After the next court order, link to a page which links to a page which links to a proxy. “Here’s some guys who will point you to some guys who will get you to the piratebay.”

How many layers of links do you think it will take for the court to realize how stupid it is?

Anonymous Lulziness says:

OK. ..done as you ordered sir

Tim Kuik photo.jpg with TPB proxy list embedded : lulziness expected

Like….. These photos contain TPB proxy list
http://www.pic-hoster.com/pictures/2f623d37b83b820480dbce965ad70079.jpg

http://s7.postimage.org/c564yubej/tim_kuik.jpg

http://i48.tinypic.com/fo3cas.jpg

jpg includes a rar file …. Extract / open the pic.jpg with Winrar

Rick Falkvinge (user link) says:

Same judge as in FTD case

It is worth noting that this is the same judge (Chris Hensen) as in the FTD case two years back, who then ruled that talking about file names is legally the same thing as distributing the actual files so named, and therefore ordered the discussion forum FTD shut down.

In the aftermath of that ruling, the judge (Chris Hansen) was discovered to be running a commercial anti-piracy business with the very plaintiff in that case; a business which was the subject matter of the trial. In most countries’ laws, that makes the judge textbook corrupt.

With that background, perhaps it is not so surprising that somebody once corrupted to that level stays corrupted:

Dutch judge who ordered Pirate Bay links censored found to be corrupt (Falkvinge on Infopolicy)

Cerberus (profile) says:

Same judge as in FTD case

The problem is that patent lawyers, judges, the whole sub-profession all know each other. They are not actually corrupt in the conventional sense (I’m convinced no money exchanged hands), but people get pulled into the same perspective on things if they hang out together too much in congresses, workshops, etc.

The fact that the judge and the lawyer taught in the same course organised by the Dutch Bar Association is not very remarkable, and the fees that the Association receives from participants (? 925) most probably stays there; I expect the lecturers to get paid by the hour. It should not be considered a commercial operation, certainly not a “business”, however much I agree with Mr Falkvinge in general.

However, this judge is known for low-quality judgements and overextending copyright laws: he ruled that downloading was illegal in a certain case, based on some British jurisprudence, which is not at all relevant: downloading is and has always been legal in the Netherlands. So this guy has to go, even though there are no signs of corruption; that’s why, knowing this, the Pirates’ lawyers did not try to have the judge recused.

As to what will happen, I expect this to be overturned by a higher court, if the Pirates appeal. They really should.

Ninja (profile) says:

Same judge as in FTD case

I remember that case and it was absurd then. If I had seen the name of the judge (and the connection to FTD) before I wouldn’t be surprised. Thanks for the tip.

It would be very interesting if the Pirate Party used this information and added very specific goals to take money out of the judicial system to their goals. I have this feeling this would boost their popularity a lot. Obviously they’d need to tell ppl how they were gonna do that but I think there are ways to attack the problem. It’s interesting, here in Brazil if you work for the Govt you can’t run any businesses related to your area (meaning none at all in fiscal areas) in the sphere you work for (ie, if you work at the state level you can have a business in the neighboring state). Maybe they could follow something in that line.

Leave a Reply to Ninja Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...