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Anti-piracy group aims to get Pirate Bay access blocked in its own backyard

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Though The Pirate Bay has been under fire for years from anti-piracy groups and advocates, it looks like the site will have to endure a brand new barrage this summer, TorrentFreak reports.

Willy Johansen, the head of Rights Alliance, an anti-piracy outfit, says that the organization will aim to open a case at the Oslo District Court in Norway in just a matter of weeks.

The goal? To get Norwegian Internet Service Providers, or ISPs, to block access to not only The Pirate Bay, but similar websites as well. The Pirate Bay was originally founded in neighboring Sweden.

Rights Alliance has already sent letters to at least one ISP in Norway, asking for The Pirate Bay, and other sites, to get banned by those companies. However, ISPs there have been unwilling to budge. Telenor, a Norwegian ISP, received a letter from Rights Alliance with those requests, and states that the firm will wait until it receives a court order to take any action.

“We can not act as a court or a police authority to act for third parties who want sites to be closed,” Telenor’s Jørn Bremtun says. “We will only deal with a court decision.” 

Though it is possible for ISPs in Norway to block access to sites, the process has to be taken up through the Norwegian court system. With that in mind, it appears that Telenor’s approach to the situation is well within the boundaries of the law there. It seems that Rights Alliance recognizes this, which is why the group is reportedly taking its campaign to the Oslo District Court.

A decision by the court is expected to come sometime this fall. 

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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