Iceland’s Largest BitTorrent Tracker Faces Permanent Shutdown

Written by Ernesto on March 16, 2008 

Torrent.is went to court this week and the site now faces a permanent shutdown and the possibility that they will have to compensate copyright owners. Since nearly 10% of Iceland’s population were members, Torrent.is was by far the most popular BitTorrent tracker in the country.

During torrent icelandNovember last year, Torrent.is received a preliminary injunction, which led to the shutdown of the site and a 50% drop in Internet traffic in Iceland.

The public hearing of the case was held this week, and the plaintiffs asked for a permanent shutdown of the BitTorrent tracker and compensation for damages.

Snæbjörn Steingrímsson, the executive of the Icelandic equivalent of the MPAA (SMAIS) led the investigation, and wants to see his clients compensated for the losses they claim to have suffered because of the tracker.

Steingrímsson said he couldn’t state the exact damages but said they were a few hundred million ISK. Interestingly, Steingrímsson was a member of the BitTorrent site himself, and shared copyrighted material on the tracker as part of his investigation.

Before the tracker was taken offline, Torrent.is had around 26,500 active users, making it by far the largest and most famous private BitTorrent tracker in Iceland. The tracker only allowed Icelandic IPs to connect to their tracker to ensure fast connectivity between peers.

Svavar Kjarrval, the head administrator of Torrent.is is convinced that he has a strong case, as he told TorrentFreak: “The plaintiffs are making an outrageous claim. They argue that website and domain owners should always be responsible for copyright violations of third parties. The case could set a dangerous precedent if the court agrees with their claims.”

It looks like Iceland is getting tougher with file-sharers. Two weeks ago, Reykjavík District Court convicted nine individuals for distributing copyrighted material via Direct Connect. Direct Connect was widely used in Iceland, but nowadays more and more users prefer BitTorrent. The individuals convicted in the Direct Connect case will most likely appeal the decision to the Supreme Court.

Previously: Demonoid Tracker Moves to Ukraine

Next: LimeWire Store Opens for Business

60 Responses

Pages: « 1 2 [3] Show All

51 Mar 18, 2008 at 19:28 by oneplusone

Let’s all go to Iceland and storm the courts! We’re with you Iceland! Bastard Antis.

52 Mar 18, 2008 at 19:30 by oneplusone

Does Iceland have entrapment laws?
Re: “Interestingly, Steingrímsson was a member of the BitTorrent site himself, and shared copyrighted material on the tracker as part of his investigation.”

53 Mar 18, 2008 at 19:45 by booradley

proclaimed shit dick

54 Mar 19, 2008 at 00:37 by Anonymous

I’ve read Mr Steingrímsson was found dead a couple of hours ago. Apparently he had been killed by 300000 little needle stitches. The funeral will be after an autopsy in 2 days. No hedgehog jokes please. The better one wins.

55 Mar 20, 2008 at 04:04 by Hössi !

hey guys, im from iceland and after http://www.torrrent.is was closed we now have 4 new torrent sites!lol….

BTW thanks for supporting iceland : oneplusone and prodigydancer :)

56 Mar 27, 2008 at 18:21 by Fallegur

The MPAA (SMAIS) lost the case this week and they were forced to pay Svavar half a million.

Hopefully Icelanders get two major torrent sites.

57 Jun 22, 2008 at 18:59 by website design

The hydra effect should kick in any day now

Pages: « 1 2 [3] Show All

Responses are closed

All remaining responses will continue to be archived. Use the TorrentFreak forums if you want to discuss something.