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Pirate Bay co-founder and far-right politician found dead after plane crash
Pirate Bay co-founder and far-right politician found dead after plane crash

Yahoo

time14-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Pirate Bay co-founder and far-right politician found dead after plane crash

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The co-founder and financial backer of file-sharing website The Pirate Bay, Carl Lundstrom, has died after a plane he was flying crashed in Northern Slovenia. Lundstrom was flying solo. The 64 year-old Lundstrom was, to put it mildly, a controversial figure with far-right political leanings and some extremely questionable associations. The Register once called him The Pirate Bay's "neo-Nazi sugar daddy" due to his links to various far-right and outright fascist groups. Lundstrom also had a sideline in Holocaust denial, claiming Nazi Germany did not set out to systematically murder concentration camp prisoners. The news was first announced by the Alternative for Sweden party, for which Lundstrom was a candidate in the 2021 elections. "Lundstrom, a legend and veteran of Swedish nationalism, died in a plane crash on Monday," reads the party's statement (thanks, Metro). "He was taking off in his Mooney M-20 from Zagreb en route to Zurich... but crashed in Slovenia." The news was confirmed by journalist Christian Peterson, who called Lundstrom his "friend" and "one of [the] Swedish opposition's most significant and fearless veterans." Reports say the plane split in two after crashing into a wooden cabin on the Velika Planina mountain in northern Slovenia on Monday. Rescue teams were not able to reach the scene until Tuesday due to bad weather. While Lundstrom's status as a co-founder of The Pirate Bay is questioned by some (see the reaction on Hacker News), it is undeniable that his considerable resources (Lundstrom was an heir to the billion-dollar Wasabröd crisp bread empire) and company Rix Telecom were integral to the site's early days. Lundstrom was one of those charged in a Swedish copyright trial and part of the so-called "Pirate Bay Four." He was found guilty, sentenced to prison and fined in 2009, though his custodial sentence was reduced to four months on appeal.

Pirate Bay co-founder dies
Pirate Bay co-founder dies

Russia Today

time13-03-2025

  • Business
  • Russia Today

Pirate Bay co-founder dies

The co-founder and financial backer of file-sharing website The Pirate Bay, Carl Lundstrom, died when the plane he was piloting crashed in the mountains of Slovenia, a nationalist Swedish political party with which the entrepreneur was linked announced on Wednesday. Slovenian police later confirmed to Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Wednesday that a body found at the crash site is 'likely of the pilot, a Swedish citizen,' but declined to identify the remains pending forensic research. The Alternative for Sweden party said in a post on Facebook that the fatal accident, which claimed the life of 'a legend and veteran of Swedish nationalism' occurred on Monday. The party cited a close friend of Lundstrom, who said that the 64-year old businessman, who had taken off in his Mooney M-20 aircraft from the Croatian capital of Zagreb, had been heading to Zurich, Switzerland. The plane crashed into a wooden cabin in the Velika Planina area of northern Slovenia, splitting the structure in two, AFP reported, adding that bad weather conditions had prevented rescuers from recovering the body before Tuesday. Lundstrom, the grandson of the founder of the world's largest crisp bread producer Wasabrod, was one of the early financial backers of The Pirate Bay. The site was launched in 2003 to allow web users to avoid paying copyright fees while sharing music, movies and other files. Telecommunications operator Rix Telecom, owned by the entrepreneur, provided services and equipment to the service until 2005. Lundstrom and three other defendants were charged with 'accessory to breaching copyright law' in 2009 and sentenced to one year in jail and ordered to pay 30 million Swedish krona ($3 million) in damages to several major media companies. As a result of an appeal claim, the fine was increased and the sentence was reduced to four months, which he served. Involved in politics, the businessman funded the Swedish Progress Party in 1991 before it later merged with the Sweden Democrats. According to Alternative for Sweden, Lundstrom joined the party in 2018, serving as a district manager and later running in the 2021 Church Assembly election, which he lost.

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