http://wired.com/news/technology/0,71544-0.html?tw=wn_index_2

A Nation Divided Over Piracy
 Quinn Norton

Last Jan. 1, almost on a whim, 35-year-old IT manager Rickard
Falkvinge got into politics.

Concerned about the reach of copyright and patent law, Falkvinge
erected a web page with a sign-up form for a radical new pro-piracy
party to compete in Sweden's parliamentary system. He didn't know if
anyone would care, but the next day the national media picked it up,
and two days later international media started calling.

The site was flooded with new members -- enough for the nascent
movement to sail past the requirements for participation in the
national election. Falkvinge now faced a decision: stay with his nice
job and let the whole thing quietly sink, or quit and become a
campaigning politician. He chose to become the leader of Sweden's
newest and fastest-growing political party: Piratpartiet, or the
Pirate Party.

Striding through the narrow, cobbled streets of Gamla Stan, Falkvinge
looks nothing like a politician in his "Pirat" baseball cap and polo
shirt. "We have a lot in common with the environmental movement," he
says. Where environmentalists see destruction of natural resources,
the pirates see culture at risk. "(We) saw a lot of hidden costs to
society in the way companies maximize their copyright."

Falkvinge is interrupted by a passing teenager. She's a young punk,
with green dreads and a jacket covered in an indistinguishable
combination of angry quips and band names -- in short, exactly the
type who once would have spent her disposable income on music.

She takes out a piece of notebook paper and asks Falkvinge for an autograph.

Lawyers, academics and pirates agree: File sharing is an institution
here. Sweden has faster broadband with deeper penetration than just
about anywhere in the world. That, combined with the techno-friendly
attitude that pervades Scandinavia and a government slow to take any
kind of action, allowed file sharing to root deeply in practice and
popular culture.

In March, game show contestant Petter Nilsson won the politically
themed Top Candidates show by delivering speeches supporting file
sharing, and committing to donating 20 percent of his $30,000 winning
to the Pirate Bay. A cultural minister from a southern Sweden
municipality admitted in June to the newspaper Svenska Dagbladet that
he downloaded music on a daily basis, and called for more adults to
"come out of the file-sharing closet." Last May's raid on the Pirate
Bay sparked street protests and cyberattacks on government websites.

But it was the spike in the Pirate Party's numbers after the raid that
might have the most lasting consequences for Sweden. Membership shot
past the nation's Green Party, which holds 17 seats in the Riksdag,
Sweden's parliament. There's no guarantee that membership will
translate into votes, but the pirates have raised enough funds to
print 3 million ballots for next month's election, and they have
enough volunteers to get them out to all the polling places.

This week, the Pirate Party broke out its own version of a chicken in
every pot when it endorsed a low-cost, encrypted anonymizing service
offered by a Swedish communications company called Relakks. For 5
euros a month, a portion of which goes to the party, anyone can share
files or communicate from a Relakks IP address in Sweden, potentially
complicating efforts to track downloaders. The party endorsement
generated enough interest to cause performance issues on the new
service.

Falkvinge may be learning the ropes of glad-handing and political
speechmaking, but a guileless fan boy slips out when I introduce him
to the founders of Piratbyran -- the pro-piracy group that created the
Pirate Bay in 2003, and inspired Falkvinge's foray into renegade
politics. He introduces the punk girl that recognized him to
co-founder Rasmus Fleischer with a hurried explanation -- "Piratbyran,
Piratbryan!" -- and Fleischer soon finds himself autographing another
piece of notebook paper, looking confused.

Piratbyran, or "Pirate Bureau," is hard to nail down as an
organization. It is best described as an ad hoc pro-piracy think tank,
but Fleischer's partner in the effort, Marcus Kaarto, won't even go
that far. "We're like a gas," Kaarto says, laughing. "You can't get a
hold on us."

Founded in 2003, Piratbyran is older than the Pirate Bay and the
Pirate Party. The group has 58,000 members registered on its website,
but its structure is informal, and no one seems to know exactly how
much money it has. It gets by on donations, including contributions
through the Pirate Bay -- with which it is no longer officially
affiliated.Kaarto and Fleischer aren't the typical think tank or
political types. Fleischer is a classically trained musician and
former leftist journalist; Kaarto plays poker for a living. They are
comfortable and funny twenty-somethings in cargo shorts, dark T-shirts
and imprecise haircuts -- blending artist and geek in a way that is
uniquely European.

They walk me around Soder, the island in the middle of Stockholm that
went from working class to gentrified bohemian in the '80s. Eventually
we land in Medborgarplatsen, a square that hosts Stockholm's large
communist May Day demonstration every year, and entertainment/retail
the rest of the time. This night it's full of cafe-goers, and posters
advertising the new Pirates of the Caribbean movie -- a film destined
to break box office records and top the downloading charts at the same
time.

Over the din, Fleischer says the Piratbyran's message isn't so much
about fighting the copyfight as explaining to the other side that
they've already lost. "Their business model won't work with digital
technology," he says.

In Fleischer's world, the Motion Picture Association of America and
rights holders are attacking digital technology itself, trying to hang
on to an outdated model. "It's an inevitability that digital data will
be copied.... The alternative to peer-to-peer piracy is
person-to-person piracy," he says. While some online pirates take
pains to distinguish themselves from those who sell counterfeit DVDs
and CDs, he sees such physical bootlegging as just "a symptom of
underdeveloped computer networks."

When asked about compensation for artists, both men reject the
language itself. No artist sits down to "create content," Fleischer
says. "Culture has always been heterogeneous," and money is only one
way of rewarding creativity. The idea of a rights holder, like a
record label or movie studio, that patronizes and distributes human
creativity is, for Fleischer, "a very strange utopia that has never
existed."

But Piratbyran is not dedicated to copyright or patent abolition -- it
has no legislative agenda. It holds a nuanced view of the created work
itself: Each work must find its own social and economic niche. "I
don't think of this (as) the big battle," says Fleischer, "but
thousands of microbattles."

Part of the surprise of Sweden is how far this approach has gotten
them. Kaarto and Fleischer are quoted in the press frequently, often
accorded the same respect a law professor would receive in the United
States. Last year the pair co-edited Copy Me, a collection of essays
about intellectual properly; the first run of 2,300 sold out, and
another is on its way.

Their positions find fertile ground in politics and public opinion.
Piracy is the subject of serious debate here, rather than
crime-busting press releases. And copyright's defenders find
themselves in an uphill battle for the soul of the nation.

Attorney Monique Wadsted, the MPAA's representative here, has the
hardest job in Sweden -- not just to try to enforce copyright under an
indifferent and occasionally hostile regime, but to convince the
average Swede that file sharing is wrong.

She meets me in a corner conference room in her office high above a
square full of Scandinavian hipsters and the punky goth kids of
Stockholm. With a knit brow, she explains that she never expected
Sweden to become a rogue nation.

"(It's) become a copyright haven, a territory where you spread
everything without fear of prosecution," Wadsted says.

Wadsted knows Fleischer -- she recently stood in a public debate with
him at the formal opening of Sweden's election campaign season. She
was not impressed. "Nobody has ever presented a good argument why this
should be free.... They like to talk about music; they have a problem
with (talking about) movies, because movies cost a lot to make."

Movies are Wadsted's passion, as well as her job, and she seems
prepared to throw herself bodily between the medium she loves and the
pirates who threaten its financial lifeblood. As a child, "I would see
(movies) with my family ... or sneak off to see them on my own, all
the time," she says.

And if file sharing and the Pirate Bay had existed when she was young?
She confesses she doesn't know if she'd have been a downloader
herself. "Would I have known any better at 14?" she muses, leaving the
question unanswered.

What's certain is she'd like to see the Pirate Bay's crew in jail. The
copyright fight is getting tense in Sweden. Wadsted speaks emotionally
of threats made against her and anti-piracy spokesman Henrik Pontien.
She says her address has appeared online, accompanied by talk of
firebombing. Ugly suggestions have been made against Pontien and his
children.

Wadsted says she knew she was opening herself up for criticism by
becoming the public face of the MPAA in Sweden, but the experience has
clearly frightened and shocked her.

The Pirate Bay's crew hasn't been spared much from the other side.

They've been called gang members, terrorists and even child
pornographers. While they laugh whenever the subject comes up, they
too seem incredulous that the debate has come to this point. There's
no evidence that extremists on either side will take violent action,
but the idea that a previously obscure area of law excites such
fanatical rhetoric was unthinkable before file sharing.

Sweden stands at a crossroads. "There will be many Pirate Bays if this
case doesn't succeed," says Marianne Levin, professor of private law
and intellectual property at the University of Stockholm. Everyone --
pirates and lawyers and politicians -- agrees: Sweden probably won't
continue to be friendly ground for overt pirates if the Pirate Bay is
convicted. That's the point of pursuing its operators.

But even with a victory in court, Levin and her doctoral research
students acknowledge that Swedish file sharing isn't going to stop.
They talk a lot about alternatives: mitigation and compromise. One
oft-proposed solution would levy a tax on internet access that would
be redistributed to artists -- but as distinctions between
professionals and amateurs get more fuzzy, it's harder to make such a
system fair.

A tax would also mean more payouts to the porn industry than is
politically feasible, points out legal researcher Viveca Still, a
faculty member at the Institute of International Economic Law in
Helsinki, Finland. That's one reason Still joins many academics in
advocating a technological solution: digital rights management, or
DRM, in which music and movie players -- software or hardware -- would
simply refuse to cooperate with pirates.

But a strict DRM regime has problems, too: For one, it would require
hard-coded limits on digital technology itself. "This would lead to
outlawing digital technology ... the Turing machine (itself)," says
Piratbyran's Kaarto. This is a price too high for society to pay to
protect intellectual property, according to DRM opponents.

If piracy's foes offer flawed solutions, Sweden's pirates concede that
their own vision isn't utopian. Parting with many copyright
minimalists in the United States, Piratbyran acknowledges that file
sharing can do real harm to rights holders. When Kaarto and Fleischer
discuss this aspect of their movement, their flippancy fades, and
their mood becomes reflective. Fleischer tells the story of Swedish
jazz in 1962.

When pop music came to Sweden, it hit hard enough that in a single
summer most of Sweden's jazz artists were left scrambling for a
livelihood. Just as silent movies destroyed theater, then talkies left
the silent stars unemployed, progress, he hints, always creates losers
as well as winners.

But progress has to be accommodated anyway, says Kaarto. "You have to
change the map, not the world."

Later, the Pirate Bay's Peter (who doesn't want his last name
revealed, in part for fear it would endanger his day job) is dining
with a crew of pirates from all over Europe. Over tabbouleh and
sausage, the talk turns to strategy: how to create media events,
awareness campaigns, educational programs to let people know that
piracy isn't about free movies -- it's about clearing the way for
culture to progress.

Peter talks about expanding the Pirate Bay beyond the current
25-language translation. He turns to me, with bright eyes: "We want to
make a Pirate Bay for kids!"

Sebastian Gjerding of Denmark's Piratgruppen warms to the idea, and
starts talking about designing a poster to hang in schools, teaching
children how to share files. The pirates bandy about names for the
campaign and seem, for the moment, to settle on "iCopy."

Later, I'm in Peter's old BMW station wagon. "One day, all these cars
will run on hydrogen," Peter proclaims, gesturing around Malmo.

"How will they make the hydrogen?" I ask.

He answers quickly, smiling, "I don't know!"

But, he assures me, they will and it isn't his problem to figure out how.

It's not the problem of the pirates, he tells me later, to figure out
how to compensate artists or encourage invention away from the current
intellectual property system -- someone else will figure that out.
Their job is just to tear down the flawed system that exists, to force
the hand of society to make something better.

If the next thing isn't good enough, they will tear that down, too.-----------

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