Visitors at a computer fair in Hannover, Germany, in March
2004. The Pirate Bay, one of the world's most popular websites for the
illegal downloading of films through filesharing, has said it wanted to
buy its own island in a bid to avoid copyright laws. [AFP]
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Stockholm - The Pirate Bay, one of the world's most popular websites for the
illegal downloading of films through filesharing, has said it wanted to buy its
own island in a bid to avoid copyright laws.
"It's not only about Pirate Bay, it's more about having a nation with
no copyright laws," one of those behind the site, who gave his name only as
Peter, said Friday.
The group said it would consider any territory in international waters to
avoid copyright legislation.
"For Pirate Bay it would be awesome to have no copyright law. All countries
today are based on the old economy and old ideas and we want to do something
new," he added.
On Friday the group established a website -- www.buysealand.com -- as a
discussion forum and to raise funds to buy Sealand, a former British naval
platform and self-proclaimed principality six miles (10 kilometres) off the
eastern coast of Britain.
No country recognises Sealand.
Sealand, world's smallest country on sale. [file]
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"We would love Sealand because its history is perfect for us as pirate radio
used to be broadcast from there. If we don't get enough money for Sealand we are
going to try for a small island somewhere," Peter said.
Pirate Bay was undeterred by Sealand's two-billion-dollar price tag.
The amount was a "show price," Peter said. "We would love to move there and
move all our servers there."
The Pirate Bay site -- www.thepiratebay.org -- was shut down by Swedish
police in May 2006. The site then reopened using servers in The Netherlands
before returning to Sweden in June.
The Pirate Bay provides instructions on how to share music and film files
using links offered on the site and attracts some 1.5 million users throughout
the world everyday.
In 2005 the Scandinavian country passed a law banning the sharing of
copyrighted material on the Internet without payment of royalties, in a bid to
crack down on free downloading of music, films and computer games.
Filesharing in Sweden carries a maximum sentence of two
years in prison.