November 9, 2007 4:41 PM PST

Prince to sue The Pirate Bay

Continuing an aggressive campaign to defend his copyrights, pop star Prince is preparing to file lawsuits within the next few days in three countries--including the United States--against The Pirate Bay, CNET News.com has learned.

John Giacobbi

(Credit: Web Sheriff)

One of the world's best-known BitTorrent indexing sites, The Pirate Bay has defiantly linked to pirated copies of films, TV shows, music videos, and other content while often boasting that it ignores Hollywood's requests to remove them. The Pirate Bay does not host any unauthorized content, but the service is internationally famous for being a highly effective file-sharing tool.

Prince will file similar suits against The Pirate Bay in the U.S., France, a country with laws favorable to copyright owners, and Sweden, where The Pirate Bay is based. In addition, Prince is preparing to take civil action against companies that advertise on The Pirate Bay, many of which are headquartered in Israel, according to John Giacobbi, Web Sheriff's president.

Prince has hired Giacobbi and Web Sheriff, a service that protects copyright materials from Internet piracy, to coordinate the legal challenges against The Pirate Bay and others who the singer believes has violated his copyright.

Giacobbi said Web Sheriff is also helping to launch an investigation into The Pirate Bay's off-shore connections to determine whether the company is compliant with Swedish and international income and corporation tax laws.

The Pirate Bay has already weathered several attempts by the governments of Sweden and the United States to shut down the site. Yet, this is likely the largest civil challenge the Web site has ever faced.

At the core of Prince's lawsuits are his claims that the three founders of The Pirate Bay are profiting from the work of artists without compensating them. The Pirate Bay earns $70,000 a month in advertising revenue, Giacobbi alleged. The site's founders have previously denied that the operation makes money.

None of the three founders of The Pirate Bay could be reached for comment.

The Pirate Bay Founders, Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm

(Credit: Pontus Alexander/Fabian Landgren)

Prince, who Giacobbi said has the backing of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, or IFPI, the group that represents the recording industry worldwide, is only adding to The Pirate Bay's legal troubles. The site founders also face criminal charges, according to a story published Thursday on the blog TorrentFreak.

A prosecutor in Sweden announced that he plans to press charges against five people involved with The Pirate Bay before January 31, 2008, the blog reported. The five are being accused of infringing on intellectual property.

The copyright battle that Prince has waged the past two months has not been without its costs. He was widely criticized this week when three unauthorized fan sites accused him of trying to violate their free speech rights when his handlers demanded that they remove several photos of him.

It was widely reported this week that Prince had begun suing fans. His representatives denied this.

"Prince is not suing his fans, is not looking to penalize fans and nor is he looking to inhibiting freedom of speech in any way," said AEG, Prince's promoter.

Prince began making headlines in September after lashing out against sites he believed were violating his intellectual-property rights.

In September, the singer said he planned to take legal action against The Pirate Bay, YouTube, and eBay. As of Friday, Prince's lawsuits appeared to be solely targeted at The Pirate Bay.

By suing The Pirate Bay in three different countries, Prince is hoping to put financial pressure on the service, Giacobbi said. Copyright laws in the United States and France would also make it nearly impossible for a site like The Pirate Bay to triumph, he claimed.

"There is no way that they will have any defense because it's blatant piracy," Giacobbi said. "They'll either have to come out and fight or just try and ignore it. In that case, we're going to win a default judgment against them. This could be a ticking time bomb for them. They can't outrun this. We are very confident."

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 40 comments (Page 1 of 3)
Stupid lawsuit behaviour...
by _t3h November 9, 2007 5:23 PM PST
>In addition, Prince is also preparing to take civil action against >some of the Israel-based companies that advertise on The Pirate >Bay, according to John Giacobbi, Web Sheriff's president. Yeah, let's sue anyone who advertises on the site, they must be responsible for what people do with it... >Besides the U.S., Prince will file suit within in the next few >days against The Pirate Bay in France, a country known for >tough copyright laws Yep, let's sue the people responsible in a country that he isn't in, and that they aren't in simply because the laws are more favourable. Nice work there :)
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Good Luck With That
by geek. November 9, 2007 5:36 PM PST
Since they don't do it for profit. First he's against his own fans, now this? He was the first to have the opportunity to sell directly to fans and make it work. He is so out of touch, it's sad.
Reply to this comment
Now everyone knows...
by thisislovell November 9, 2007 5:46 PM PST
If you've been paying attention to him for the past 10-15 years, you would know that Prince is: a.) Kinda crazy. b.) Extremely controlling over everything and anything involving him and his art. With these lawsuits, everyone else is starting to see it too. For proof, watch "An Evening with Kevin Smith" and listen to him talk about working on a documentary for Prince.
Reply to this comment
w/e
by XoneDaGnome November 9, 2007 6:26 PM PST
Yet another Fatal attempt. France has what to do with it? The MPAA and Web Sheriff has already tried once without success. Here are some the Legal threats TPB has received: http://thepiratebay.org/legal Enjoy.. I know I did.
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Prince your not famous anymore
by kyle172 November 9, 2007 9:20 PM PST
Someone forgot to tell Prince the 80's have been over for a longtime
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Some say to just share more Prince music....
by Jim Hubbard November 9, 2007 9:21 PM PST
"To get it across to the little #@%%&^, that the music industry is dead as he once knew it - simply share all of the Prince stuff that you can get your hands on!" - that's what I have seen others saying in response to Prince's attempts to grasp at the memories of what was - you know, when he put out music that people actually wanted to hear... And, just like the Metallica debacle, I'm quite sure that will happen. Ironic, isn't it? Prince is encouraging the very thing he is suing to stop. I know it must be hard to actually have to work for a living - but that's life and Prince should go ahead and learn that now.
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Isn't Prince Famous Enough?
by savagesteve13 November 10, 2007 1:55 AM PST
He's already invaded our public radio, CD collection, football halftime shows, movie houses. The little purple elf must be snorting some really expensive cocaine if he's worried about his percieved cashflow dent caused by TPB.
Reply to this comment
Lets sue them all
by vertig0730 November 10, 2007 4:35 AM PST
Well Prince is at it he might want to sue the ISP's and DNS providers. He could say if PriateBay was not listed in the DNS lists his work could not be copied or stolen. Or. He could sue Al Gore I mean he did invent the internet and start this whole thing.
Reply to this comment
Its amazing
by Wickedashtray November 10, 2007 5:24 AM PST
The Pirate bay does NOT host illegal files, thats the bottom line. Whether you feel its "ethical" or not is irrelevant, they are not breaking the law. A bittorrent link is the equivalent of a URL found via Google. It like prosecuting Google for a link to child porn rather than prosecute those actually responsible for the media. Unfortunately the "chosen people" who run our media companies would find the cost prohibitive to prosecute those who are truly breaking the law....those pirating the actually program/media in question. So they go after a few guys who they can hold up as an example. Its amazing how these media companies are simply continuing what is essentially shoveling against the tide. Their distribution models are obsolete but instead of changing they want to litigate their way back into the mothers womb. I hope The Pirate Bay emerges victorious but given the money grubbing reach of the chosen ones I don't have much optimism.
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can the pursuit narrowband profits hinder progress
by wildchild_plasma_gyro November 10, 2007 5:46 AM PST
Ok so Prince wants to make money for his work and to hold a base of respecting fans. Consumers want as much as they can get on their big home storage systems not to mention want to have accesses to more services possible with faster internet technology. Pirate bay wants to make money. The ability to share data from many sources is the very fondation of the internet making it as universal as it is. The problem here is that the coperate view is too narrow to allow the internet to progress and yet the coperate model is by far the dominant model. My hope here is that the co-operative world of networking and the coperate world of banking clash to from the best options. It's up to us us to make sure that this is so and that the Narrow interest band continues to widen in a way that respects the creative issues of human efforts. Things are moving this way more and more each year but so too are many groups used to the perpetuation of the current economic model curently in process. So anyway i hope that things work out well here.
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