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PETER SUNDE

Pirate Bay’s Sunde launches micropay site

One of the co-founders of file sharing site The Pirate Bay has launched a social micro-payment system called Flattr.

Pirate Bay's Sunde launches micropay site
The Pirate Bay's Peter Sunde (left) and Flattr colleagues in Limhamn office

After three years of development, the site, started by The Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde and equivalent to an Internet tip jar, announced its open beta release on Thursday.

Sunde described the site as “not actually micropayments, it’s nanopayments” in an FT.com Tech Blog article last month.

Unlike PayPal, Flattr, which is based in Limhamn in southwestern Malmö, charges a minimal €2 (18.90 kronor, $2.60) monthly fee from which a user can send funds to the websites he or she wishes to support.

The site, named both for flattering someone and a flat-rate payment model, believes it is attractive to users who would otherwise hesitate to donate amounts under €10 since users can donate as little as €0.01 – or less.

Users who wish to solicit funds can add a Flattr button to their website. When visitors click on the buttons, the amount the user chooses to donate is transferred.

Prior to the open beta launch, the site had 20,000 members by invitation tipping an average of €0.15.

Initially, Flattr will charge a 10 percent of each user’s monthly fee, a figure which will drop as the service attracts more users.

Despite comparing its service to PayPal’s, the only two ways to deposit money into a user’s account is by Visa, MasterCard or Nordea through Moneybookers or PayPal, both of which deduct fees from the original sum.

Already, the site has produced tangible figures, especially in Germany. Newspaper site Taz.de received €988.50 in June from Flattr, while Netzpolitik.org earned €576.53 or €0.25 per click in the same period, FT.com reported

Separately, a photographer has received €33 from 90 clicks from two Flattr buttons and a group of American sewing bloggers also counts itself among Flattr’s early adopters.

According to the FT.com report, among the site’s investors are Last.fm’s first investor and chairman, Stefan Glaenzer and Eileen Burbidge, formerly at Skype, who added she is unconcerned about Sunde’s Swedish court conviction in The Pirate Bay case.

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PIRATE BAY

Sweden now owns Pirate Bay domain names

The Swedish state became the unlikely new owner of two domain names used by The Pirate Bay after a court ruling on Tuesday.

Sweden now owns Pirate Bay domain names
The Swedish state now owns two Pirate Bay domain names. Photo: Vilhelm Stokstad/TT

In its ruling the Stockholm district court awarded Sweden the domain names piratebay.se and thepiratebay.se

The case marked the first time a Swedish prosecutor had asked for a web address to be wiped off the face of the internet, Dagens Nyheter reports

“A domain name assists a website. If the site is used for criminal purposes the domain name is a criminal instrument,” prosecutor Fredrik Ingblad told the Swedish daily earlier this year. 

Sweden’s Internet Infrastructure Foundation, which controls the Swedish top level domain .se, opposed the prosecutor’s move to prohibit any future use of the two Pirate Bay addresses.

The court agreed that the foundation had not done anything wrong and conceded that it could not force the group to block certain domain names, Dagens Nyheter reports. But by awarding the addresses to the Swedish state the court effectively ensured that they will not be sold on to another owner. 

The file-sharing service was temporarily knocked off line in December after police seized servers hosted at a data centre in a nuclear-proof bunker deep in a mountain outside Stockholm.

But seven weeks later the resilient file-sharing behemoth was back on its feet and Tuesday’s ruling is unlikely to knock it off balance for long, as the court cannot prevent The Pirate Bay from continuing to run sites on other domains.

The Pirate Bay, which grew into an international phenomenon after it was founded in Sweden in 2003, allows users to dodge copyright fees and share music, film and other files using bit torrent technology, or peer-to-peer links offered on the site – resulting in huge losses for music and movie makers.

In 2009 four Swedes connected with The Pirate Bay were found guilty of being accessories to copyright infringement by a Swedish court. 

They were each give one-year jail terms and ordered to pay 30 million kronor ($3.6 million) in compensation.