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Pirate Bay finds itself in the cross-hairs of European courts

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They are really cracking down on Pirate Bay in the old world lately. First, an anti-piracy group announces that they’ll be going after Pirate Bay in Norway. Now, the Belgian Supreme Court has ordered local Internet service providers to find and shut down access to Pirate Bay proxies. 

The case initially began as a lawsuit filed by the Belgian Anti-Piracy Foundation and Belgian ISPs Belgacom and Telenet. The purpose of the lawsuit was to block access to Pirate Bay, but the Antwerp Commercial Court initially ruled in favor of the ISPs. However, the Court of Appeal later reversed the ACC’s initial ruling. Since then, Pirate Bay access has been stonewalled. 

To get around the issue, people simply began to access Pirate Bay via proxies. The new ruling by the Belgian Supreme Court addresses that loophole, forcing ISPs to effectively act as the Internet police, preventing access to Pirate Bay; directly or via proxy.

However, not every ISP in Belgium wants to play along with this latest ruling. Belgacom rep Jan Margot called the Supreme Court’s verdict “disproportionate,” and had this to say on the matter.

“Internet providers are obliged to continue to block The Pirate Bay, even if the site moves to another domain. That is a very broad definition which obliges providers to police the entire Internet. This is something we can not accept.”

This new ruling by the Belgian Supreme Court is set in stone and cannot be appealed. It’ll be interesting to see what happens on the file sharing front from this point since it’s becoming increasingly clear that there are forces in Europe bent on stymieing the practice.

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Konrad Krawczyk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Konrad covers desktops, laptops, tablets, sports tech and subjects in between for Digital Trends. Prior to joining DT, he…
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