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Saturday, November 29th, 2014

    Time Event
    10:05a
    Pirate Bay’s Peter Sunde Picks Up Fight for a Free Internet

    peter-sundeOn November 10 former Pirate Bay spokesman Peter Sunde was released from the high security prison where he’d been detained since his arrest last May.

    After more than two weeks on the outside Peter is still struggling to put his thoughts into words and come to terms with what happened, a process that needs time.

    Peter, who was Pirate Bay’s public face but never got involved in day-to-day operations, sees his incarceration as a kidnapping. He never committed a crime, but was jailed for a made-up offense due to pressure from the copyright lobby.

    While in prison Peter lost his father. Not being able to stand beside his loved ones during this time made it all so much worse. Slowly, however, there’s a light glimmering at the end of the tunnel, a light that strengthens Peter’s inner-urge as an Internet activist.

    Today, Peter is kind enough to share some of his thoughts on the past and future with TF and the many people who spoke out in his support during the past few months.

    Looking back at the difficult months in prison, and ahead to his future as a free man, it’s clear that Peter hasn’t given up on his fight to preserve a free and open Internet. Quite the contrary.

    “Data is the oil of our century and the fight against piracy is our version of the invasion of Kuwait. Put this into context and the fight for a free and open network becomes something else. It becomes the fight for a free humanity and open society,” he says.

    TF: Looking back at your time in prison, what was the hardest part?

    Peter: The hardest part was actually not being there, but the fact that I could not take care of things outside. The people who depend on me, especially my father, didn’t have me there when they needed me. People I work with had (and still have) to work much harder since I’m not around to take care of things.

    The other things, the fact that the “food” was uneatable and unhealthy, the fact that there was nothing to put your mind into besides books and letters which essentially makes one lose one’s intellectual skills. The fact that you’re never really treated as a human being but rather a bastard that deserves shit, are all awful things but not comparable to the feeling of being un-free in a situation of crisis.

    TF: Was there anything positive?

    Peter: The positive things? I realize that criminals in general are not the people one should be afraid of. Criminals are mostly products of a state that didn’t care enough for its citizens. The people they commit crimes against are victims of victims. The most dangerous criminals I met inside were those who committed the crime of breaking human rights on a daily basis. They are the ones making sure that criminals keep being criminals. But positive? The most positive thing was leaving.

    TF: You mention the term “kidnapping” in relation to the prison sentence. Can you elaborate on that?

    Peter: Well yes. Kidnapping: “In criminal law, kidnapping is the unlawful taking away or transportation of a person against that person’s will, usually to hold the person unlawfully.” – there’s no legal merit in taking me, because I’ve never committed a crime. The state has abused their powers. The whole case is similar to me saying that someone owns me money, making a false receipt and then taking the money from that persons wallet. Noone would consider that right or legal. Hence, the state kidnapped me.

    TF: Can you tell us a little bit about the projects you’re working on, or have planned for the future?

    Peter: I’m working on lots of things, as usual. I’ve wasted a lot of time during my kidnapping, and I still need some time to catch up with myself. Not (only) because of the kidnapping, mostly for family reasons. There are big things coming, besides the public things such as heml.is (which btw, is awfully close to release and the team is awfully awesome) and a new version of Flattr which will turn a lot of heads. The bigger things are not announced nor public, and mostly still in the planning stages. But it will be bigger than the other projects.

    TF: Have you come to any new insights over the past months, or new project ideas?

    Peter: Lots of ideas! My issue has always been that I have a lot of ideas that I want done, but usually not the funds, time or team (because of the funds mostly) to make them happen. I’ve decided to work less hands-on with tech and rather focus on the idea development.

    I’ve always tried to merge my views on politics with tech, but I also need to merge those things with reaching out to the mainstream public. That’s my next thing. Not going more mainstream, but reaching out to it more. Also, I’ve decided to spend more time on hobbies (such as my work in comedy and architectural design) since I think it’s better to get a break from doing the same thing 24 hours a day.

    TF: What are the main threats the Internet faces today? How should these be addressed? Do you plan to get involved yourself?

    Peter: I’ve been involved for as long as I can remember now, and I’m never stopping. The main threats are the same as always – the quest for control and power. Everyday more people connect to the network, and every day we move power away from users to big corporations that have lobbyists employed to make sure they’re allowed to centralize. All these corporations, that claim to love the free and open web, that say that the free market ensures it will be a-ok, really lock down the internet and buy their competitors so that they own the markets.

    If we don’t stop it now it will end up in an armed revolution in a few years. The internet has gone from being a playground for new technology and entertainment to becoming the bearer of almost all communication, information and expressions; while still being treated as a playground in a sense. The market owners play with our personal information for a profit, states play around with our secrets and integrity (and for that matter, other states secrets and integrity).

    All while we, the people, use the systems that enslave us to try to kill the beast. We click “like” on Facebook when we see a group trying to stop Facebook from violating our human rights. We need to wake up out of that stupidity and demand our rights back.

    The past decades we all saw the internet being free. We can’t imagine a non-free network today. But it will become locked up, closed down, segregated, if we’re still this naive further down the line.

    It’s never been about just the free downloads for me. They just happened to be the first step, the first fight. Data is the oil of our century and the fight against piracy is our version of the invasion of Kuwait. Put this into context and the fight for a free and open network becomes something else. It becomes the fight for a free humanity and open society.

    Based on the above it’s clear that the Internet hasn’t heard the last of Peter just yet, whether it’s Heml.is, Flattr or any of the new projects. We wish Peter all the best in accomplishing his goals and want to thank him profoundly for sharing his thoughts with us, which wasn’t easy.

    Finalizing our question round we asked Peter where he wants to be in 10 years.

    “Still in love,” he replied.

    Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing and anonymous VPN services.

    5:34p
    Sony Movies Leak Online After Hack Attack

    sonyThe company is certainly no stranger to security issues but this week has been particularly miserable even by Sony’s ‘high’ standards.

    Hacked on Monday by a group calling themselves the Guardians of Peace, Sony Pictures’ systems remain down today, a sign of the situation’s gravity.

    While the attack appears to be aimed at punishing Sony for its actions in the past, reports suggest that the attackers also made off with an estimated 11,000 gigabytes of files. Seriously upping the ante, the hackers warned Sony that “sensitive” data would be released into the wild if their demands were not met.

    sony-gop

    A thread on Reddit has been piecing together details of what information could have been obtained and it’s not pretty. Documents containing passport and visa information for cast and crew working on Sony movies, Outlook inboxes, documents detailing the company’s IT systems plus accounting and research information appear to be just the tip of what could be a gigantic data iceberg.

    Since this is Sony Pictures it will come as no surprise that video files are also reported as being part of the hackers’ booty. Interestingly the first reports detailed pirated TV shows which may have been downloaded by Sony staff.

    Adventure Time-2x04a-Power Animal.avi
    Adventure Time Her Parents.avi
    Adventure Time The Silent King.avi
    Adventure Time-2x09b-Susan Strong.avi
    Adventure Time-2x11a-Belly of the Beast.avi
    Human.Planet.S01E05.720p.BluRay.x264-SHORTBREHD.mkv
    Human.Planet.S01E02.720p.BluRay.x264-SHORTBREHD.mkv
    Human.Planet.S01E06.720p.BluRay.x264-SHORTBREHD.mkv
    Human.Planet.S01E03.720p.BluRay.x264-SHORTBREHD.mkv
    Human.Planet.S01E04.720p.BluRay.x264-SHORTBREHD.mkv
    Human.Planet.S01E01.720p.BluRay.x264-SHORTBREHD.mkv
    Human.Planet.S01E07.720p.BluRay.x264-SHORTBREHD.mkv

    But while Sony desperately tried to get its systems back online and figure out what had been taken, mid-week and within minutes of each other, DVD screener copies of four Sony movies began appearing online. Making matters worse, just one has been officially released in the United States. They are:

    Still Alice‘ starring Julianne Moore, Alec Baldwin (US date: Jan 16, 2015)

    Mr Turner‘ starring Timothy Spall. (US date: Dec 19, 2014)

    Annie‘ starring Jamie Foxx and Cameron Diaz. (US date: Dec 19, 2014)

    Fury‘ starring Brad Pitt (US date: Oct 17, 2014)

    In the absence of any useful comment from Sony there’s little to officially link the leaks with Monday’s hack attack. However, a page on popular torrent site 1337x reveals that a user uploaded these and another upcoming Sony movie (‘To Write Love on Her Arms’ – US release date March 2015) on Wednesday or Thursday with a naming convention highlighting Sony.

    god-movie

    While all of the leaked titles are proving popular, the Sony-watermarked ‘Fury’ is way out in front and currently the second most downloaded movie among Pirate Bay users.

    sony-water

    Finally, among the thousands of files taken from Sony there are other items of interest to piracy watchers. The files detailed below appear to relate to the automatic content recognition systems operated by anti-piracy company Audible Magic.

    audible_magic_sftp_private_key.ppk
    audible_magic_sftp_private_key.ppk
    set_ssh-private-key-file.htm
    audible_magic_sftp_private_key.ppk
    private_and_private_key.txt

    Whether more Sony movies will appear online in the days to come remains to be seen, but the fallout from this week’s hack will send shockwaves through the company for months to come.

    Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing and anonymous VPN services.

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