2013
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2314297
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Baywatch: Two Approaches to Measure the Effects of Blocking Access to the Pirate Bay

Abstract: In the fight against the unauthorised sharing of copyright protected material, aka piracy, Dutch Internet Service Providers have been summoned by courts to block their subscribers' access to The Pirate Bay (TPB) and related sites. This paper studies the effectiveness of this approach towards online copyright enforcement, using both a consumer survey and a newly developed non-infringing technology for BitTorrent monitoring. While a small group of respondents download less from illegal sources or claim to have s… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Neither results are conclusive by themselves, however both gave very similar results, strengthening the conclusion that the blockade was ineffective [13]. A more extensive review of the ethical aspects of this case is described in [14].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…Neither results are conclusive by themselves, however both gave very similar results, strengthening the conclusion that the blockade was ineffective [13]. A more extensive review of the ethical aspects of this case is described in [14].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…Both are rather crude instruments, indiscriminately blocking legal content and copyright infringing content based on the source. DNS blocking of websites does not function as a very high threshold since there are sufficient methods available to bypass the blockade (Dilmpieri, King & Dennis, 2011) (Wesselingh, Cristina & Tweeboom, 2013) (Poort, Leenheer, van der Ham & Dumitruc, 2013). IP address blocking appears to do the job, but may only be imposed in cases where an infringing website is the only website behind an IP address.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adermon and Liang (2014) find a similar effect caused by stricter legislation in Sweden, but they also show that the effect diminishes after 6 months. Evaluating the effects of DNS-blocking in the Netherlands, Poort et al (2014) find a small decrease in self-reported piracy-levels of music, video, games and books. But also in their data, the effect vanishes after 6 months for most content types.…”
Section: Evidence On the Effectiveness Of Online Copyright Enforcementmentioning
confidence: 98%