Peter Sunde

Peter Sunde

Sunde in 2009.
Born Peter Sunde Kolmisoppi
(1978-09-13) 13 September 1978
Uddevalla, Sweden
Other names brokep
Known for Co-founder of The Pirate Bay
Founder of Flattr
Co-founder of Kvittar
Co-founder of IPREDator

Peter Sunde Kolmisoppi (born 13 September 1978), alias brokep, is a politician, computer expert, and spokesperson with Norwegian and Finnish ancestry.[1][2] He is best known for being a co-founder and ex-spokesperson of The Pirate Bay, a BitTorrent search engine.[3] He is an equality advocate and has expressed concerns over issues of centralization of power to the European Union in his blog.[4] Sunde also participates in the Pirate Party of Finland.

Personal life

Before the founding of the Pirate Bay Sunde worked for a large German medical company. In 2003 he became a member of Sweden's Piratbyrån (The Pirate Bureau) and a few months later Sunde, Fredrik Neij and Gottfrid Svartholm started The Pirate Bay with Sunde as the spokesperson.[5] He remained The Pirate Bay's spokesperson until late 2009 (three years after the ownership of the site transferred to Reservella). In August 2011 Sunde and fellow Pirate Bay co-founder Fredrik Neij launched file-sharing site BayFiles, that aims to legally share.[6] Sunde is vegan[7] and speaks Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian, English and German.

Peter Sunde ran for European Parliament in 2014 election with the Pirate Party of Finland.[8]

On 31 May 2014, just days after the EU elections and exactly eight years after the police raided The Pirate Bay servers, Sunde was arrested at a farm in Oxie, Malmö to serve his prison sentence for the Pirate Bay case.[9] He was released five months later after having served two-thirds of his eight-month sentence.[10]

The Pirate Bay trial

Main article: The Pirate Bay trial

On 31 January 2008, The Pirate Bay operators – Sunde, Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm and Carl Lundström (CEO of The Pirate Bay's former ISP) – were charged with "assisting [others in] copyright infringement".[11] The trial began on 16 February 2009. On 17 April 2009, Sunde and his co-defendants were found to be guilty of "assisting in making copyright content available" in the Stockholm District Court. Each defendant was sentenced to one year in prison and ordered to pay damages of 30 million SEK (approximately 2,740,900 or US$3,620,000), to be apportioned among the four defendants.[12] After the verdict a press conference was held where Sunde held up a handwritten IOU statement claiming that is all the damages he will pay, adding "Even if I had any money I would rather burn everything I own and not even give them the ashes. They could have the job of picking them up. That's how much I hate the media industry."[13]

The defendants' lawyers appealed to the Svea Court of Appeal together with a request for a retrial in the district court claiming bias on the part of judge Tomas Norström.[14] The district court ruled there was no bias and denied the request for a retrial. On appeal, the jail sentences were reduced, but the damages increased. The supreme court of Sweden subsequently refused to hear any further appeal. The European Court of Human Rights also later rejected an appeal.[15]

Segments of an interview with Sunde talking about copyright, the Internet, and culture are featured in the 2007 documentary Steal This Film and 2013 documentary TPB AFK.

Flattr

Main article: Flattr

Flattr is a micropayments system started by Sunde and Linus Olsson, which enables viewers of websites to make small donations to the developer by clicking a "Flattr this" button. At the time of the projects's announcement in February 2010, Sunde explained that "the money you pay each month will be spread evenly among the buttons you click in a month. We want to encourage people to share money as well as content."[16] Flattr itself takes a 10% administration fee.[16]

After Wikileaks's initial publication of the U.S. Diplomatic Cables, companies including Visa, MasterCard, PayPal and Moneybookers blocked donations and money transfers to the site. Flattr, however, continued allowing donations to Wikileaks. Sunde commented "We [Flattr] think their work is exactly what is needed and if we can help just a little bit, we will."[17]

Hemlis

On 9 July 2013, Peter Sunde, together with Leif Högberg and Linus Olsson, announced a fundraising campaign for Hemlis.[18] Their goal was to launch a mass market messenger that was private, secure and beautiful.[19]

On 22 April 2015, the Hemlis team announced that they were discontinuing the development of the Hemlis messaging platform.[20]

Kopimashin

By 14 December 2015, Sunde released a video[21] on his Vimeo account of a device called "Kopimashin" - a machine made with a Raspberry Pi console that runs a Python routine to produce 100 copies per second of Gnarls Barkley's single "Crazy", storing the copies in /dev/null repository (where the data is discarded), surpassing the eight million copies per day.

The following day, Sunde published the full description of the device and project at Konsthack as the first art project of the site's portfolio.[22]

The machine has an LCD screen (as shown in the video) that calculates a running tally of the damages it has supposedly inflicted upon the record industry through its use, accordingly to what RIAA claims on their website.[23] If RIAA's claims are valid, it also means the record industry is supposed to bankrupt soon due to Kopimashin [24] and that's one of the points the project wants to prove with a physical example.

A few days later, Sunde told news site TorrentFreak that Kopimashin was created to ″...show the absurdity on the process of putting a value to a copy...″ and that ″...putting a price to a copy is futile.″,[25] also noting that it's merely an act against the record industry itself and recording labels, who have claimed millions of dollars in losses to the music industry to be caused by Sunde and The Pirate Bay over the past years.

References

  1. Kuprijanko, Alexander (2009-02-07). "Jag känner inte att jag gör något fel". Sydsvenskan (in Swedish).
  2. Waters, Darren (16 April 2009). "Countdown to Pirate Bay verdict". BBC. Retrieved 20 April 2009.
  3. Thorkildsen, Joakim (2008-01-31). "Norske Peter tiltalt i The Pirate Bay-saken". Dagbladet (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2008-06-29.
  4. EUP 2014
  5. "Pirate Bay's Founding Group 'Piratbyrån' Disbands". TorrentFreak. 2010-06-23. Retrieved 2012-02-03.
  6. "Pirate Bay Founders Launch "Legal" File-Sharing Site". Tomsguide.com. 2011-08-31. Retrieved 2012-02-03.
  7. Pirate Bay Crew Chums Up to Foes Over Lunch
  8. Pirate Bay Co-Founder to Run For European Parliament, TorrentFreak
  9. The Pirate Bay Spokesperson Peter Sunde Arrested in Sweden, Revolution News
  10. Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde freed after 5 months in prison, Ars Technica
  11. "Pirate Bay Future Uncertain After Operators Busted"
  12. "The Pirate Bay Trial: Official Verdict - Guilty"
  13. Kiss, Jemima (17 April 2009). "Pirate Bay defendant: we can't and won't pay". The Guardian. London.
  14. "Pirate Bay lawyer calls for retrial". The Local. 2009-04-23.
  15. "The European Court of Human Rights rejects Pirate Bay file-sharing appeal"
  16. 1 2 "Pirate boss to make the web pay". BBC News. 12 February 2010. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  17. "Peter Sunde Kolmisoppi : Kevin Trudeau Show". Ktradionetwork.com. 2010-08-23. Retrieved 2012-02-03.
  18. https://hemlismessenger.wordpress.com/2013/07/09/hello-world-we-are-fundraising/
  19. Pirate Bay Founder to Launch NSA-proof Messenger App
  20. https://hemlismessenger.wordpress.com/2015/04/22/sometimes-you-understand/
  21. "KH000//Kopimashin". 14 December 2015. Retrieved 25 December 2015.
  22. "Konsthack > Portfolio > KH000 // Kopimashin". 15 December 2015. Retrieved 25 December 2015.
  23. "RIAA > Piracy Online > Who Music Theft Hurts". Retrieved 25 December 2015.
  24. "RIAA > Piracy Online > Scope of the Problem". Retrieved 25 December 2015.
  25. "Pirate Bay Founder Builds the Ultimate Piracy Machine". 19 December 2015. Retrieved 25 December 2015.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Peter Sunde.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.