It’s the use of law to extort money from those who illegitimately shared copyrighted files. Here, adversaries cum original copyright owners are more interested in procuring money from infringers, rather than publishing their works by providing official licences. While this practice seems reasonable, filthy intentions of gaining money using litigations aren’t accepted by the torrenting community, or at least Bahnhof.

Bahnhof who?

I wish my internet provider to be like this. Bahnhof is a Swedish ISP who’s actively fighting against such copyright trollers. Though it seems typical, the firm’s actually against such extortion. It’s so supportive that, it’s maintaining data of all these cases since the beginning and even dedicated a page for public information. Further, the firm even evades obeying to court orders for disclosing their subscriber’s data. While this may seem weird, it could be more of a PR for the firm and even gives a competitive advantage over its competitors. In Sweden, stats of such trolls have increased to peak heights of targets complaining about 60,000+ IP addresses to be caught, just in 2019. The law firms representing the actual copyright holders are demanding the court to obtain personal details of infringers so that they can have a direct settlement for their acts. These trolls do not seem to be slowing down anytime soon, as there were dozens of cases filed in 2020, already.

Swedish Copyright Trollers Charged Over 60 000 BitTorrent Users in 2019 - 17Swedish Copyright Trollers Charged Over 60 000 BitTorrent Users in 2019 - 83Swedish Copyright Trollers Charged Over 60 000 BitTorrent Users in 2019 - 95Swedish Copyright Trollers Charged Over 60 000 BitTorrent Users in 2019 - 54