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    Home Cybersecurity
    • Cybersecurity

    Pirate Bay Is Dark, but Clones Seem to Have Surfaced

    Written by

    Sean Michael Kerner
    Published December 16, 2014
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      On Dec. 9, rogue torrent-tracking site The Pirate Bay went dark after Swedish authorities raided the Stockholm operations of the site. Nearly a week later, the primary domains for The Pirate Bay, which include Thepiratebay.se and Thepiratebay.org, remain offline.

      The Pirate Bay had provided pointers to where files could be found and then downloaded with the BitTorrent protocol. Although The Pirate Bay had links to legitimate content, the site has also been well-known as a source of pirated media content.

      Although the primary Pirate Bay domains have been dark, other domains purporting to have Pirate Bay content have emerged to fill the void. One of those sites is Thepiratebay.cr, which has been publicly outed by torrent news site Torrent Freak as not being officially affiliated with the real Pirate Bay operation. The Pirate Bay site with the .cr domain is most likely just a clone of the Pirate Bay site. Another site that claims to be the new home of the Pirate Bay is located at http://thepiratebay.com.ua/, but there is no indication that site is anything other than a clone, as well.

      While many of the fake Pirate Bay clones do not admit to being unofficial clones, one of them does. A site located at https://oldpiratebay.org/ has now been launched by torrent tracking search engine Isohunt. In a blog post, Isohunt wrote that the Pirate Bay will be missed and the Oldpiratebay.org site has been built in its honor.

      “We, the Isohunt.to team, copied the base of the PirateBay in order to save it to the generations of users,” Isohunt wrote. “Nothing will be forgotten.”

      While the Oldpiratebay.org site is now providing users with a clone of what had been available on Pirate Bay, there is some confusion over who speaks for the site, with the Twitter account @oldpiratebay. The @oldpiratebay Twitter account tweeted on Dec. 14 that it is the official account for the Oldpiratebay.org site and @isohuntto is not the official domain or account.

      In reply @isohuntto responded by updating Theoldpiratebay.org site with a notice that the @oldpiratebay Twitter account is in fact a fake.

      It’s still unclear what the real plans are for a return of the official Thepiratebay.org site. eWEEK contacted the domain registrar for Thepiratebay.org domain about its status but did not receive a response by press time. eWEEK also attempted to contact the listed registrant for thepiratebay.org domain but also did not receive a reply.

      While eWEEK was unable to get an official comment on Thepiratebay.org‘s plans for return, TorrentFreak was able to receive some comments from one of the individuals involved with the site’s operation. Apparently, there are no concrete plans yet on whether an official Thepiratebay.org site will be rebooted.

      What is clear at this point, given the volume of Pirate Bay copycat sites, is that there is still intense interest and demand for such a site. Pirate Bay was never the only site of its type offering users access to torrent trackers. Yet Pirate Bay is somewhat unique in that it built a brand and a loyal user base no other torrent site appeared to match.

      More than a decade ago, when Napster first emerged as the place to go to download music illegally, it too had a solid brand name that resonated with users. Napster did lose its legal battle in 2001, but the Napster name lived on for many years as the name of legal service for music. Today, the Napster.com domain just redirects users to the Rhapsody.com music service.

      Time will tell how Thepiratebay will evolve and whether it is a name that will still exist a decade from now, or like Napster, just fade into the background of Internet history.

      Sean Michael Kerner is a senior editor at eWEEK and InternetNews.com. Follow him on Twitter @TechJournalist.

      Sean Michael Kerner
      Sean Michael Kerner
      Sean Michael Kerner is an Internet consultant, strategist, and writer for several leading IT business web sites.

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