The Second Coming of Kim Dotcom
“That would be allowing them to get away with this stunt. I won’t accept that. By staying here I’m saying, ‘Eff you! You can’t defeat me!’”
Piracy is Progress
The band Ghost Beach is running a controversial billboard campaign in New York’s Times Square. With slogans such as “Piracy is Progress” and “Piracy is Robbery” they are encouraging other artists to speak their mind about copyright infringement
The Pirate Bay Sails to North Korea
The Pirate Bay has been offered virtual asylum in North Korea. This move comes after the Norwegian Pirate Party was forced to stop routing traffic for the infamous BitTorrent site by a local copyright group
The Pirate Bay Sets a New Course
Following legal threats, The Pirate Bay departs Sweden and sets sail for more friendly waters such as Norway and Spain
What #INN Thought of The Pirate Bay Documentary [Video]
In a stunning exposure of the Pirate Bay saga and the fight for Internet Freedom, TPB AFK (The Pirate Bay - Away From Keyboard) accurately depicts the incredible, gargantuan disconnect between the Internet generation and its predecessor
The Pirate Bay Helped WikiLeaks
The upcoming Pirate Bay documentary TPB AFK will highlight some under-reported details about the connection between the BitTorrent site and Wikileaks
So, Now It’s Illegal to Jailbreak a Smartphone…
Consumers hoping to transfer a new smartphone from one mobile carrier to another could face up to five years in jail and a $500,000 fine because of a ruling from the Librarian of Congress that went into effect Saturday
Could MEGA Dismantle Copyright Forever?
Mega is a weapon aimed straight at copyright rights holders. It’s maybe the most private, invincible file-sharing service of all time
A MEGA Comeback
The infamous Internet pioneer and Freedom Fighter, Kim Dotcom has today, re-launched his file-sharing website that last year, on this day, was destroyed by the U.S. government
Free Speech Wins, Anti-Islam YouTube Video Stays
The anti-Islam film the White House initially blamed for inciting the Sept. 11, 2012 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi can stay up on YouTube, a federal judge ruled Friday

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