Greek man sentenced to prison for running a private torrent site 10 years ago

Alfonso Maruccia

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In brief: A private BitTorrent community that has been offline for more than 10 years recently led in an unprecedented sentence for a Greek man. Local authorities appear to be sending a clear message: illegal file-sharing activities will now be treated as a serious criminal offense.

A 59-year-old living in the Greek city of Piraeus was recently sentenced by a local court to five years in prison, a €10,000 fine, and an additional €1,800 in legal costs. According to reports, the man was involved with a popular Greek BitTorrent site more than a decade ago. The website is long defunct and does not appear to have provided him with significant financial gain.

The site in question, P2Planet.net, launched in 2011 and shut down in 2014. Despite struggles with hosting costs and repeated DDoS attacks targeting Greek P2P sites, the community managed to attract over 44,000 registered members. The site's torrent tracker hosted 14,000 torrents, mostly offering films, TV series, music, and software.

According to the ruling, P2Planet was eventually shut down by local law enforcement. Authorities raided the home of the person they identified as the private tracker's administrator, arrested him, and seized a hard drive for forensic investigation. Members of the community primarily used Azureus/Vuze, a BitTorrent client that was once popular but has been abandoned for about seven years.

More than 10 years after the case was first opened, the Court of Appeals in Piraeus handed down a harsh and unprecedented sentence. According to sources, it is the first time in Greece that someone has been sent directly to prison for facilitating the unlawful sharing of copyrighted content through the BitTorrent network.

Observers were reportedly stunned when the judge ordered the man to be handcuffed and taken to prison immediately.

The sudden arrest follows a similar case in the city of Larissa, as authorities appear determined to signal that unlawful content sharing will now be treated as a serious criminal offense.

In reality, file sharing represents only a small fraction of online piracy and copyright infringement today. Streaming has become a far more widespread phenomenon, though peer-to-peer networks are still targeted as major offenses in some European countries and beyond.

As TorrentFreak reported, a comparable five-year prison sentence was handed down a few years ago to the operator of greekstars.net and greekstars.co. In that case, the defendant initially received a suspended sentence but was later arrested and imprisoned after attempting to relaunch the offending domains.

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Better lock this man behind bars than a rapist or a murderer ! The same all over Europe, justice is just a sham.
 
How is exactly Greece corrupt? You are clueless.
Well, I'd say by accepting the completely invalid assertion by rights-holders that this man somehow damaged legitimate sales and should be held accountable - almost certainly by being bribed or otherwise influenced by these rights-holders to provide this sentence when reality clearly shows that he had ZERO affect on anything...

Of course, Greece is no more corrupt than any other nation doing this...
 
This is dystopian punishment. The amount of European obedience towards the copyright industry is downright bizarre. I'm sure, Sony, Warner et. al. are very grateful - thank you, judge!

I mean 5 years for a defunct BitTorrent site from 10 yrs ago and no financial profit....

I found this older US statistics from the BJS for prison times by crime category:

A 5-year sentence is higher than the median for rape, manslaughter and other capital crimes. You could sell drugs to kids in the US and won't be put behind bars that long. Hopefully the dude can appeal that decision. Otherwise: Failed state.
 
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It’s an ad. Greece is a tourist trap where the price of a falafel is hotter than the sun. Greeks only profession is to rob tourists with overpriced services. They invented democracy and then spend the next 2500 years to prove that it was bad idea. :)
 
I killed billions of beings.
I burned thousands of live animals.
I set fire to 3 different ducking planets.
I even mixed DNAs to create a gazillion monsters.
I even created an entire planet worth of servers with torrents.
All of them in a past lifetime.
WHAT THE DUCK YOU GONNA DO ABOUT IT, GREECE?
 
That’s a pretty harsh sentence, especially considering the site’s been dead for years and didn’t even bring in serious money. Five years in prison and thousands in fines for something from over a decade ago feels excessive, especially in the context of how digital laws have changed since then.

It kind of reminds me of how boatus handles old boating policies they adapt and move forward instead of punishing people for past gray areas. Maybe the legal system could take a page from that playbook.
 
This man is a monster... who could do something like this to companies like Nintendo, Disney, or Netflix?

This thief was stealing property that cannot be owned... good for him...

(of course this is sarcasm)
 
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