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Pirate Bay could get parliamentary protection

By Iain Thomson on Jul 7, 2010 2:46PM
Pirate Bay could get parliamentary protection

Pirate Party bid to run servers from inside Swedish parliament.

Sweden’s Pirate Party has said that it is now acting as the Pirate Bay’s internet service provider and plans to use the country's parliamentary law to protect the site.

In a statement the party, which has two members in the European Parliament, said that it hopes to take over the running of the site from within Sweden’s parliament if it wins seats there in elections to be held in September.

If the party wins a seat in the parliament it believes it can run the servers without fear of legal action, since Swedish law forbids MPs from being prosecuted for actions carried out as part of their political mandate.

“In practice, this implies total immunity for any political action taken within this working environment,” said the organisation.

“Some of the Pirate Party's prospective MPs intend to use this to host the entire Pirate Bay from inside the parliament, if today's operators of the site accept this and if we win a place in parliament.”

“The Pirate Bay is actually both legitimate and legal already today, so technically no such immunity should be needed, but it is a practical way to get a short respite from the copyright industry's legal barrage.”

The Pirate Bay torrent directory has been under sustained attack by the media industry, which sees the site as promoting copyright violation. The site has been taken down and restarted many times but is running out of possible hosts.

The Pirate Party has said that the current restrictive laws on copyright are costing the country jobs and technological advancement and hopes running the site from parliamentary servers will highlight its cause.

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By Iain Thomson
Jul 7 2010
2:46PM
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