Some people have asked whether the Swedish defendants could get any help, hints or advice from the Finnish BitTorrent case where litigation started already in 2006 and is currently heard before the Finnish Supreme Court.
My brief answer: no. It is true that Finnish and Swedish copyright laws are almost identical, word by word, and the facts of the cases — the administration of a BitTorrent-tracker — are in par as well. Ok, in Sweden they also generated some ad revenue which they did not manage to do in Finland. And in Sweden they publicly laughed at take-down claims while in Finland they received only one, and complied with it. However, the main difference is how copyright law has been read. It is obvious that the identically worded copyright laws have been applied very differently in each case. Let me compare them briefly:
1. Finland (as charged, and accepted by a district and appeals court)
- 32 admins (about half released, some 10 left appealing at the supreme court)
- administration = direct copying and distribution; no aid or conspiracy (yes, you read it correctly)
- covers every work and every infringing act (believe it or not…)
- about 0.5 million euros in damages (charge was 5 million) plus almost as much in legal costs
2. Sweden (as charged)
- 4 admins
- administration = aid and conspiracy to distribution; no direct acts, no copying
- covers only listed 37 works
- about 10 million euros in damages
You could have guessed based on the subtle differences in facts that the defendants should have won most of their charges in Finland. But that has not been the case. As you can see, the Finnish case has been much broader than what they have even tried to claim in Sweden. Thus, we in Finland will use the Swedish case to argue for the defense before the Supreme Court. We really hope to limit our case at least to the extent the prosecutor and copyright holders have already done in their claims in Sweden. But it is obvious that vice versa our case does not help the Swedes at all.
More of our articles concerning Intellectual Property Rights can be found here: Tekijänoikeus.