The Internet’s most notorious pirate is in trouble again, and no online petition is going to help him this time. As the BBC reports, Pirate Bay co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm Warg could spend another six years in prison.
Svartholm has been found guilty of hacking in a Danish court, and awaits the sentencing axe, which could fall any minute now. The case is unrelated to his file sharing activities, and it’s the latest trial that finds Svartholm guilty of maliciously breaking into other people’s PCs.
Svartholm’s defense team claims it presented a strong case suggesting that Svartholm could have been framed for the crimes he has most recently been convicted of. Luise Høj, Svartholm’s defense attorney, provided no conclusive evidence that proved the blamed party was innocent.
“I only needed to reach the point where there was reasonable doubt about it,” Høj says.
Apparently, some doubt existed, given that Svartholm’s computer was infected with no less than 545 security threats. As such, the possibility that someone hijacked the PC and used it to commit the crimes couldn’t be ruled out.
At least two jurors thought so, but the rest didn’t. Ultimately, Svartholm was found guilty of breaking into the systems of CSC, which is a U.S.-based multinational IT service provider. An unnamed 21-year-old Danish accomplice would have had to face sentencing too, but walked free after doing 17 months in pre-trial detention.
Started in April 2012, the attacks on CSC’s servers reportedly lasted four months. During that time-frame, the hackers had access to the company’s confidential data. They stole and altered information at will.
In a separate legal proceeding, Svartholm was sentenced to two years in a Swedish jail for breaching Logica computers, which were being used to do work in matters related to Sweden’s tax office, as well as a bank. That sentence was later reduced to one year after an appeal.
Before that, his most notorious trial saw him incarcerated for one year for charges of copyright content violation associated with his involvement in running The Pirate Bay. For that crime, he was sentenced in 2009.
If Svartholm did the crime and will do the time, there’s a precious lesson for amateur hackers and tinkerers reading this. Only use your knowledge and powers for the greater good.
If he didn’t, and he was framed by a different hacker, an even more important lesson is to be learned. Install antivirus and antimalware software, run it often, and stay protected.