Monday, June 8th 2009

Pirate Party Elected to EU Parliament

The Pirate Party silenced skeptics, gathering enough votes in the European Union elections this year, to make it to the Parliament from Sweden. This serves as a huge victory to the party whose ideology revolves around fighting harsh and archaic copyright laws and enforcement agencies, that it finds incompatible with the digital age we live in. The party secured 7.1 percent of the 99.9 percent districts' votes counted, which guarantees at least one of the 18 or 20 seats Sweden contributes to the EU Parliament. Sweden has 20 seats, but until the Lisbon treaty passes only 18 with voting rights. In this case, the party might secure 2 seats.

Rick Falkvinge, leader of the party, in a statement to TorrentFreak said "Together, we have today changed the landscape of European politics. No matter how this night ends, we have changed it." National and International press gathered in Stockholm, where the party celebrates its landmark victory. "This feels wonderful. The citizens have understood it's time to make a difference. The older politicians have taken apart young peoples' lifestyle, bit by bit. We do not accept that the authorities' mass-surveillance," Falkvinge added.
The voter turnout for the elections was 43 percent. Nearly 200,000 people voted for The Pirate Party, way up from its performance in the 2006 Swedish national elections, where it secured 34,918 votes. With their presence in the EU Parliament, the party wants to fight the abuses of power and copyright laws at the hands of the entertainment industries, and make those activities illegal instead. On the other hand they hope to legalize file-sharing for personal (non-commercial) use.
Source: TorrentFreak
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268 Comments on Pirate Party Elected to EU Parliament

#1
Unregistered
Unfortunatley,it may be a case of a small voice,drowned out in a sea of millions of loud voices.Well done to them,but i wonder if they will be able to change anything.
#2
TheMailMan78
Big Member
Great one small step for pirates, One giant fall for artists. WTF is wrong with the EU for allowing this. To hell with these people.
Posted on Reply
#3
Weer
TheMailMan78Great one small step for pirates, One giant fall for artists. WTF is wrong with the EU for allowing this. To hell with these people.
Arrrr!
Posted on Reply
#4
h3llb3nd4
:wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf::wtf:
Thats all I'm gonna say...
People these days:shadedshu
Posted on Reply
#5
Triprift
Arrr we be in eu Parliament me hardys.
Posted on Reply
#6
TheMailMan78
Big Member
Why create?? Everything I do will be taken from me and given away. Good bye to the professional artist.
Posted on Reply
#7
MRCL
European Union is fucked anyway, Pirates or not. Lets see how this turns out.

I rather would have seen a party for not banning and censoring games for adults to save the youth.
Posted on Reply
#8
jamesrt2004
TheMailMan78Why create?? Everything I do will be taken from me and given away. Good bye to the professional artist.
its not just about pirating its about getting rid of shitty things like RIIA...
Posted on Reply
#9
TheMailMan78
Big Member
MRCLEuropean Union is fucked anyway, Pirates or not. Lets see how this turns out.

I rather would have seen a party for not banning and censoring games for adults to save the youth.
You guys have no idea how much this pisses me off as an artist. There is no argument for this.
Posted on Reply
#11
farlex85
TheMailMan78Why create?? Everything I do will be taken from me and given away. Good bye to the professional artist.
If you're only creating for monetary compensation, then I would argue you aren't really making any art. And if you're paid for advertising or something, than suck it up and stop complaining. ;)

Anyway I hope this will actually do some good, perhaps pressure some positive changes to the digital world.
Posted on Reply
#12
Unregistered
Say, mailman, is any of your work on TPB? Or any torrent site for that matter?
#13
DrPepper
The Doctor is in the house
TheMailMan78Great one small step for pirates, One giant fall for artists. WTF is wrong with the EU for allowing this. To hell with these people.
Erm the EU allowed it because its democratic. The people elected them so they can't say no because others don't agree with them, although I'm glad they don't have much of a say it would only be negative to companies.
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#14
Paintface
good job! democracy that actually works for the people :)
Posted on Reply
#15
ShogoXT
I think you guys are assuming things based on their name the "pirate" party. If you actually look what they are doing, they seem to be the first honest politicians in some time. You guys think this is a battle of artists vs pirates, its not. The publishing companies ever since they havent adapted to the move to digital distribution been simply stalking and suing normal people for all their money. They do it effectively and quietly without letting them get good representation. Artists themselves arent actually making this money, the publishing industry keeps its all for itself.

I for one dont recognize them anymore. They are no longer a business, they instead make a living now solely on suing. The pirate part is for net neutrality and strong privacy. Not letting these companies gang up on you and steal all your money under the guise of artists losing money.

Thats just my opinion.
Posted on Reply
#16
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
TheMailMan78You guys have no idea how much this pisses me off as an artist. There is no argument for this.
and if you ever got shafted by a record company, or a big corporation you'd be thinking other thoughts.

This is part of a big shakeup - yes, some people will lose out in the meantime. but in the long term, things will get re-organised and sorted out the way the majority wants - and not the way the rich people want.
Posted on Reply
#17
tkpenalty
wow. EU politics finally dont seem so boring.
We have a nazi, and we have a pirate LOL.
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#18
h3llb3nd4
tkpenaltywow. EU politics finally dont seem so boring.
We have a nazi, and we have a pirate LOL.
What? does the Nazi party still exsist?:wtf:
Posted on Reply
#19
DrPepper
The Doctor is in the house
h3llb3nd4What? does the Nazi party still exsist?:wtf:
Indeed. Just a new name the BNP (British National Party) I believe.
Posted on Reply
#20
tkpenalty
h3llb3nd4What? does the Nazi party still exsist?:wtf:
Neo nazi. That racist anti-immigration bastard, and National parties in general.

anyway To those artists who are only too concerned over their profits. You only get so much of the royalties. And music, and your image and your influence should be your concern, and not your wallet.

I've seen too many artists turn into crap when they go major. If you make music for the sake of money then forget about it. Its not music.
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#21
A Cheese Danish
h3llb3nd4What? does the Nazi party still exsist?:wtf:
Does here in the states. However they are silent the majority of the time.

It will be interesting to see how this turns out...
Posted on Reply
#22
Error
Hello everybody :)
This is one great step towards a more democratic Europe. The idea is great and the only ones who probably won't benefit from the Pirate Party's ideas are the big companies (who already made tons of money, even with the piracy at hand).

For instance: if you're a musician that makes quality music and have ideas about making money from it ... you always can do some concerts/parties, sell vinyls/cds, promoting your work via sharing it freely on the web - i can bet you won't be having any problems :)

Let the creativity be the deciding factor ... not money.
Posted on Reply
#23
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
ErrorFor instance: if you're a musician that makes quality music and have ideas about making money from it ... you always can do some concerts/parties, sell vinyls/cds, promoting your work via sharing it freely on the web - i can bet you won't be having any problems :)

Let the creativity be the deciding factor ... not money.
thats my way of seeing things. Sure, SOME ways of life wont work. Sitting on your ass letting your last good song pour in the millions, for example. But you can still make a lot of money even if no one buys the album - radio stations will pay to play it, TV music channels will pay for the video clips. And then theres all the live performances - people can pirate your songs, but they cant copy you so do things that focus on you, not the music.
Posted on Reply
#24
WhiteLotus
TheMailMan78Great one small step for pirates, One giant fall for artists. WTF is wrong with the EU for allowing this. To hell with these people.
Democracy works or fails... whichever. They were voted by the people not the EU.
DrPepperIndeed. Just a new name the BNP (British National Party) I believe.
and UKIP - same party different colours.
Posted on Reply
#25
Deleted member 3
TheMailMan78You guys have no idea how much this pisses me off as an artist. There is no argument for this.
Agreed, every MP3 downloaded damages the artist for at least $100K. At least we have politicians with half a brain who want to prevent these retarded American lawsuits to exist in the EU. Of course making everything legal is a bit too much.
Their other (2) ideas are a lot more serious/realistic though. Namely altering the (pharmaceutical) patenting system and protecting our privacy instead giving it up to America's fear of terrorists and whatnot. Considering plenty of politicians believe in fairy tales anyway and base their view of the world on that I don't see the Pirate Party as something bad.
Posted on Reply
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