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The Pirate Bay 2.0

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Dateline London: On June 30, news broke that The Pirate Bay had been purchased by a little known publicly traded company named Global Gaming Factory X based in Stockholm. Having been through the p2p wars in my own rite, the only thing I could think was “those poor bastards have no idea what they’re in for”. After all, it’s nearly impossible to come up with a new model for digital music, especially in a market that’s dominated by Apple, and, well, The Pirate Bay. The reality is that there’s no way that Global Gaming Factory can keep operating Pirate Bay as an illegal site. It’s a public company and the shareholders would never allow it. 

In interviews, the CEO, Hans Pandeya, talked about how he intended to start paying Pirate Bay users for resources. It just didn’t make any sense to me and didn’t to everyone else in the business that I spoke to. Everyone was confused as to what they had in mind and how they could make it work as a legitimate site without losing all of their users. Mind you, TPB has about 20-25 million users who generate 1 billion page views a month. But even with all of that traffic an ad-supported model still couldn’t cover the content costs. And Pandeya had said that they had no intention of changing the Pirate Bay user experience. 

Well a funny thing happened 2 days later. It was about Thursday, July 2 around 6:30PM and I was doing my grocery shopping (Thursdays are senior citizen days and you get a 5% discount) when my phone rang. Well friends, just when you thought it was safe to go back into the water–Bam!! It was Hans Pandeya calling. Long story short, I am now working with Hans to facilitate the model and helping to make the Pirate Bay site legit. So Jaws is back. And I’m sure a lot of people won’t be so thrilled about that!

At first I was still a little fuzzy about what Hans was trying to accomplish. But after several long conversations I now get it. And it is pretty ingenious. I’m calling this new model “resource supported”. In short, the more computer resources the user contributes to The Pirate Bay, the more his content consumption is subsidized. I won’t drill down any further due to commercial confidentiality, but it can actually work. And if it does, it will be huge.

I’ve been in London this week meeting with content providers and various major executives in the international music scene. Big players. And every one has been supportive and, dare I say, excited. They see that it could really work.  I left a label meeting Tuesday unlike any I have ever had. They were fantastic! They are real partners and want to do what they can to actually help us keep all of the Pirate Bay traffic and not tie us up in Gordian knots that would drive all the users away. It was truly incredible and exciting and when the time is right I will go out of my way to give these guys the credit that they deserve, because, together, we’re going where no mortals have ever traveled. So, my friends, I leave you with these words: live long and prosper.



Author

  • Wayne Rosso

    Wayne Rosso has worked in music and technology for decades. He has worked with such artists as Aerosmith, Bee Gees, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Public Image LTD., Beach Boys, Phillip Glass, Fleetwood Mac, Rick James, New Kids on the Block, Slash, Evanescence and scores of others.

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