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Pirate Bay leader bored to tweets by appeal

By Liam Tung
Sep 29 2010 7:29AM
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Mocks prosecutor for relief.

Pirate Bay leader bored to tweets by appeal

"Believe me, this is so boring, it's not worth listening to," Pirate Bay founder Peter Sunde tweeted to his 13,000 followers from Sweden's court of appeal today.

Three of the four Pirate Bay leaders Sunde, Fredrik Neij and Carl Lundstrom reluctantly appeared in the Stockholm court on Tuesday to appeal a 2009 decision against them for assisting copyright breach.

"Going to the city I hate - Stockholm. Good thing it's just for today," wrote Sunde.

Gottfrid Svartholm Warg failed to turn up, with his lawyer receiving a message in court that Svartholm Warg was ill and stuck in Cambodia.

The four were handed a one-year prison term in 2009 as well as an order to pay 30 million kronor (AU$5 million) to rights holders.

Prosecutor Hakan Rosvall spent much of the day outlining emails sent between the Pirate Bay leaders, which detailed its advertising plans from the site.

One email revealed that Sunde would travel to the US to close an advertising deal worth between US$100,000 and US$200,000, according to Swedish paper, Svenska Dagbladet.

Rosvall also quoted an email from Pirate Bay lawyer Carl Lundstrom to the group in which Lundstrom said that the organisation was "surrounded by the Anti Pirate Bureau" and suggested shutting the site down as his clients faced a possible one-year jail term.

Throughout the day, Sunde continued to poke fun at the prosecutor on Twitter for Roswall's inept usage of everyday technology.

"I don't mean to be disrespectful, but he can't even show a PowerPoint presentation, yet he thinks #spectrial is uncomplicated."

Sunde had created the hash tag #spectrial for the 2009 copyright hearing.

He then teased Rosvall for failing to grasp how internet traffic was charged.

"He has no record of what he says even," Sunde added.

Sunde told Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet that whatever happened in the appeal, the case would end up before  the Supreme Court.

"It is a waste of time," he said.

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