Carl Lundström needs to pay the whole thing, because he is the only one with the money, so they are gonna appeal it now xD
Also, please keep in mind they did NOT break any copyright infringement, but they helped those who did.
Btw, here is a list of who is gonna share the money xD
Hmm... lots of programmers in that list.
Fact is, Bill Gates built a financial empire on the work of the computer science club, who shared everything. Although he admittedly paid $20,000 for the software MS DOS was based on, it was reverse engineered from somebody else's program. Windows was not an original Gates idea, the folks at Xerox were designing a gui, showed what they were doing to MS who ran with it. There's a great documentary about this called "Triumph of the Nerds."
Software piracy and media piracy are really misnomers. Pirates take what they want at gun point. Call it software sharing and media sharing.
As for losing money... I have to admit I downloaded all three Lord of the Rings movies, but I saw all three at the theatre (paying full price) multiple times, downloaded long before any of them were available on dvd and purchased the full collectable box sets six months later when they did finally come to stores. Did the creators of LOTR lose any money from my act of "piracy?" Clearly, not. Did the movie companies (or their authorized distributors) lose any money from my act of "piracy?" Also, not (I bought my boxes at Blockbuster, again full price totalling over $300Cdn.)
If anything, media sharing has generated interest in their products and created new revenue streams for them. CD music wasn't nearly as popular until mp3's came out. People complained that vinyl records sounded better and the new media was too expensive. Actually the material costs for production was much less and the musick (sp

) industry raked in the dough.
I agree that using a name like The Pirate Bay was just asking for it. How about
www.shareit.com, is that domain taken?