[Reader-list] The schizo-politics of The Pirate Bay, Inc. (from Nettime)

Shuddhabrata Sengupta shuddha at sarai.net
Thu Jul 2 03:25:30 IST 2009


Dear all,

many of us have been dedicated users of the treasures of the pirate  
bay. Now that situation is going to change. Or is it really?
Read this intriguing post (posted recently on Nettime) to find out  
more, and wonder.
regards,

Shuddha

The schizo-politics of The Pirate Bay, Inc.
by Rasmus Fleischer
Posted on Nettime, 1 July, 2009


?YOU FUCKING CORPORATE SELL OUT RATS!? Users of The Pirate Bay are  
raging.
About a thousand comments were posted at The Pirate Bay?s blog during  
the
first day after the news, probably 90-95 % expressing sadness or  
anger over
the supposed sell-out. Some mainstream commentators in Sweden, on the  
other
hand, greeted this as a step towards the abandonment of digital piracy.

We are used to imagine The Pirate Bay as a legendary entity fighting  
an epic
battle, on behalf of the millions of file-sharers. However, it is not
exactly a legendary entity that is being sold. It is something  
different. So
what is about to be sold?

?The Pirate Bay? is today, among other things:
     * A domain name
     * A web site
     * An ad selling business
     * A blog
     * The world?s largest bittorrent tracker
     * A clothing store
     * Three persons
     * A swarm
     * A symbol

?The Pirate Bay? must be defined as an assemblage. Any of the listed  
parts
would, on its own, be powerless. Only through its connections, the
assemblage becomes so powerful. However, all the parts are not needed  
all
the time. Two are enough to make up the practice of bittorrent file- 
sharing:
a swarm of file-sharers, and a tracker to connect them.
Many file-sharers are using The Pirate Bay?s tracker services without  
even
visiting the website. Other indexing websites, like Mininova, are  
using The
Pirate Bay?s tracker. Technically speaking, The Pirate Bay?s website has
always been rather redundant. But the website is a platform for  
connecting
two other parts: The commercial part of the ads, which are needed to  
finance
the large costs for bandwidth and hardware, and the political part of
linking to current side-projects and publishing sporadic blog posts.

This assemblage is now being disassembled and reassembled, in one way or
another. That means something else than a ?sell-out? of all the  
parts. All
the details of the affair are not clear yet, but to clear up the  
picture, we
should first consider each part for itself, and ask three simple  
questions:
1) Is it ownable?; 2) Is it sellable?; 3) Is it copyable?

* The domain name, www.thepiratebay.org, is definitely part of the  
affair.
It is ownable and sellable, but not copyable given the current DNS  
regime.
The web site that the visitor of the domain is directed to could be  
said to
be ownable, in the sense that any new owner can change its contents.  
But it
is also copyable, meaning that the ?original? version can pop up  
again at
another domain name. Actually, it is very simple to copy. You can fit  
all of
The Pirate Bay, including the software and every torrent, on a USB  
stick.
* The ads have a value only as long as people visit the web site (and  
do not
know how to use Adblock). The blog derives its meaning from the personal
activity of the three persons involved, and could be hosted anywhere.
* The three persons (Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm  
Warg) are
especially interesting, as they can definitely not be copied. But can  
they
be owned and sold? Yes, theoretically. In earlier cases of ?P2P sell- 
out?,
individuals have signed contracts regulating their future  
involvements in
other projects. This is not the case here. The trio is free to do  
what they
want, including political activism and even exact copies of The  
Pirate Bay.
* The tracker consists of hardware and (open source) software,  
possible to
copy but not to uphold without financing. This part will not be part  
of the
incorporation. Instead of being sold, the tracker service will be
transferred to a separate entity, that provides the service freely to  
any
index wanting to use it, and supposedly does not even have the  
information
about files it is tracking. This essentially would mean a small step  
towards
decentralisation of the file-sharing infrastructure. It probably also
undermines the whole case the prosecutor made against The Pirate Bay in
court. Questions about the financing of and control over this new third
party tracker remains to be answered. However, it should not be  
assumed that
control goes to the buyers of ?The Pirate Bay?.
* The swarm of millions of file-sharing humans and machines can not be
owned, nor sold, nor copied. It can, indeed, be fooled. Usually, that? 
s what
cases of ?P2P sell-out? aims for, without much success. This time  
chances
are even smaller that the swarm would keep using a service if it  
began to
filter torrents or demand money for downloads. The Pirate Bay?s  
tradition of
strong principles have educated people to be wary even of small
restrictions. If such would occur, the swarm is ready to move on.  
However,
nothing at this point (except some vague formulations in a press release
from the buying company) indicates that there are any such plans.
* The (visual and ideological) symbol ?The Pirate Bay?, finally, is
fundamentally transformed by the act of selling ?The Pirate Bay?. It  
does
not really mean that the symbol can be sold. Rather, any attempt by the
owner of the domain name to change what the symbol stands for, would  
mean
that the symbol is dissolving and its associations re-projected at  
multiple
other symbols. This could have quite interesting results. Even if The  
Pirate
Bay and its associated projects have been able to use the power of one
singular symbol, there has also been an awareness of the problem with  
The
Pirate Bay?s oligopolic status.

File-sharing was never about leaning behind and letting other people  
do the
work. The act of selling ?The Pirate Bay? (which really means selling  
some
of the components in a larger assemblage) could work as a wake-up call.
Ideally, the anger of some users will transform into action, so that  
more
open bittorrent indexing website, maybe even trackers, will be set  
up. That
would mean that The Pirate Bay, finally and paradoxically, reaches  
its goal,
which is to be copied. The Pirate Bay never asked to be the sole
representatives of file-sharing. When large parts of the world?s  
internet
traffic depends on whether Fredrik is too drunk to fix a server error, a
radical diversification is needed to maintaing the power of P2P
file-sharing. Dissolving the centered subject, abandoning a trademark to
multiply what it stands for. That?s the implicit schizo-politics of The
Pirate Bay?s recent move.

RASMUS FLEISCHER
(Me = co-founder of Piratbyr?n. Cooperating with, but not involved  
in, The
Pirate Bay. No financial connection whatsoever with the current
incorporation plans.)


PS. Also read Jonas Andersson?s great analysis:
http://liquidculture.wordpress.com/2009/07/01/the-pirate-bay-two- 
important-speculations/


?YOU FUCKING CORPORATE SELL OUT RATS!? Users of The Pirate Bay are  
raging.
About a thousand comments were posted at The Pirate Bay?s blog during  
the
first day after the news, probably 90-95 % expressing sadness or  
anger over
the supposed sell-out. Some mainstream commentators in Sweden, on the  
other
hand, greeted this as a step towards the abandonment of digital piracy.

We are used to imagine The Pirate Bay as a legendary entity fighting  
an epic
battle, on behalf of the millions of file-sharers. However, it is not
exactly a legendary entity that is being sold. It is something  
different. So
what is about to be sold?

?The Pirate Bay? is today, among other things:
     * A domain name
     * A web site
     * An ad selling business
     * A blog
     * The world?s largest bittorrent tracker
     * A clothing store
     * Three persons
     * A swarm
     * A symbol

?The Pirate Bay? must be defined as an assemblage. Any of the listed  
parts
would, on its own, be powerless. Only through its connections, the
assemblage becomes so powerful. However, all the parts are not needed  
all
the time. Two are enough to make up the practice of bittorrent file- 
sharing:
a swarm of file-sharers, and a tracker to connect them.
Many file-sharers are using The Pirate Bay?s tracker services without  
even
visiting the website. Other indexing websites, like Mininova, are  
using The
Pirate Bay?s tracker. Technically speaking, The Pirate Bay?s website has
always been rather redundant. But the website is a platform for  
connecting
two other parts: The commercial part of the ads, which are needed to  
finance
the large costs for bandwidth and hardware, and the political part of
linking to current side-projects and publishing sporadic blog posts.

This assemblage is now being disassembled and reassembled, in one way or
another. That means something else than a ?sell-out? of all the  
parts. All
the details of the affair are not clear yet, but to clear up the  
picture, we
should first consider each part for itself, and ask three simple  
questions:
1) Is it ownable?; 2) Is it sellable?; 3) Is it copyable?

* The domain name, www.thepiratebay.org, is definitely part of the  
affair.
It is ownable and sellable, but not copyable given the current DNS  
regime.
The web site that the visitor of the domain is directed to could be  
said to
be ownable, in the sense that any new owner can change its contents.  
But it
is also copyable, meaning that the ?original? version can pop up  
again at
another domain name. Actually, it is very simple to copy. You can fit  
all of
The Pirate Bay, including the software and every torrent, on a USB  
stick.
* The ads have a value only as long as people visit the web site (and  
do not
know how to use Adblock). The blog derives its meaning from the personal
activity of the three persons involved, and could be hosted anywhere.
* The three persons (Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm  
Warg) are
especially interesting, as they can definitely not be copied. But can  
they
be owned and sold? Yes, theoretically. In earlier cases of ?P2P sell- 
out?,
individuals have signed contracts regulating their future  
involvements in
other projects. This is not the case here. The trio is free to do  
what they
want, including political activism and even exact copies of The  
Pirate Bay.
* The tracker consists of hardware and (open source) software,  
possible to
copy but not to uphold without financing. This part will not be part  
of the
incorporation. Instead of being sold, the tracker service will be
transferred to a separate entity, that provides the service freely to  
any
index wanting to use it, and supposedly does not even have the  
information
about files it is tracking. This essentially would mean a small step  
towards
decentralisation of the file-sharing infrastructure. It probably also
undermines the whole case the prosecutor made against The Pirate Bay in
court. Questions about the financing of and control over this new third
party tracker remains to be answered. However, it should not be  
assumed that
control goes to the buyers of ?The Pirate Bay?.
* The swarm of millions of file-sharing humans and machines can not be
owned, nor sold, nor copied. It can, indeed, be fooled. Usually, that? 
s what
cases of ?P2P sell-out? aims for, without much success. This time  
chances
are even smaller that the swarm would keep using a service if it  
began to
filter torrents or demand money for downloads. The Pirate Bay?s  
tradition of
strong principles have educated people to be wary even of small
restrictions. If such would occur, the swarm is ready to move on.  
However,
nothing at this point (except some vague formulations in a press release
from the buying company) indicates that there are any such plans.
* The (visual and ideological) symbol ?The Pirate Bay?, finally, is
fundamentally transformed by the act of selling ?The Pirate Bay?. It  
does
not really mean that the symbol can be sold. Rather, any attempt by the
owner of the domain name to change what the symbol stands for, would  
mean
that the symbol is dissolving and its associations re-projected at  
multiple
other symbols. This could have quite interesting results. Even if The  
Pirate
Bay and its associated projects have been able to use the power of one
singular symbol, there has also been an awareness of the problem with  
The
Pirate Bay?s oligopolic status.

File-sharing was never about leaning behind and letting other people  
do the
work. The act of selling ?The Pirate Bay? (which really means selling  
some
of the components in a larger assemblage) could work as a wake-up call.
Ideally, the anger of some users will transform into action, so that  
more
open bittorrent indexing website, maybe even trackers, will be set  
up. That
would mean that The Pirate Bay, finally and paradoxically, reaches  
its goal,
which is to be copied. The Pirate Bay never asked to be the sole
representatives of file-sharing. When large parts of the world?s  
internet
traffic depends on whether Fredrik is too drunk to fix a server error, a
radical diversification is needed to maintaing the power of P2P
file-sharing. Dissolving the centered subject, abandoning a trademark to
multiply what it stands for. That?s the implicit schizo-politics of The
Pirate Bay?s recent move.

RASMUS FLEISCHER
(Me = co-founder of Piratbyr?n. Cooperating with, but not involved  
in, The
Pirate Bay. No financial connection whatsoever with the current
incorporation plans.)


PS. Also read Jonas Andersson?s great analysis:
http://liquidculture.wordpress.com/2009/07/01/the-pirate-bay-two- 
important-speculations/


Shuddhabrata Sengupta
The Sarai Programme at CSDS
Raqs Media Collective
shuddha at sarai.net
www.sarai.net
www.raqsmediacollective.net




More information about the reader-list mailing list