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Pirate Bay closure sparked file-sharing boom

Submitted by: KnightMare @ 03:25 PM | Monday, November 2, 2009 | (url: http://www.pcpro....)

The temporary closure of the Pirate Bay had the unforeseen side effect of forcing torrent sharers underground and causing a 300% increase in sites providing access to copyright files, according to McAfee.

In August, Swedish courts ordered that all traffic be blocked from Pirate Bay, but any hope of scotching the piracy of music, software and films over the web vanished as copycat sites sprung up and the content took on a life of its own.

This was a true 'cloud computing' effort, the company said in its Threats Report for the third quarter. The masses stepped up to make this database of torrents available to others.

Pirate Bay is just a redirect site to lead people to sources where they can get media and other files, McAfee security analyst Greg Day told PC Pro. Once it was temporarily shut down, those people still wanted the torrents so they went elsewhere, and that meant lots of other sites popped up to take advantage we saw a 300% increase in sites hosting and distributing movies and software."

According to Day, in the days prior to the shutdown, treasure-hunters used anonymising software to gain access and copy the indexes that Pirate Bay used to redirect users to other computers hosting torrents.

Once the indexed data was in the public domain, open-source code was available to anyone who wanted to help with redistribution of torrents. While the Pirate Bay was offline there were four times as many sites offering access to the torrents.

The Pirate Bay example shows how difficult it is to 'stop' data once it is on the web, the report says. A website can be shut down, but anyone who has accessed the content may still be able to redistribute it.


11-02-09 - 03:28 PM
Guess that's why I'm waiting on the X-Files.
11-02-09 - 03:28 PM
Thats badass.
11-02-09 - 03:29 PM
what this should prove is that theres no way to stop piracy

unfortunately, politicians will read this as: we need to be even more strict and make even more laws to prevent it!

yay for the death of the internet incoming
11-02-09 - 03:32 PM
well that sucks. I always liked the pirate bay
11-02-09 - 03:34 PM
Heh, go go interseas.
11-02-09 - 03:35 PM
it was a great run for pirate bay

the best thing about tpb was their blatant disregard for the MPAA/RIAA and their lawsuits.
11-02-09 - 03:40 PM
Originally posted by Highfive  
well that sucks. I always liked the pirate bay


Eh, ISOhunt is better.



TPB will be back in time. I don't know why they think they can stop this.
11-02-09 - 03:42 PM
The same thing happened with Napster. I thought people would've learned by now that shutting stuff like TPB down would just create a void that others will fill.
11-02-09 - 03:49 PM
Originally posted by LGBR  

yay for the death of the internet incoming

:rolleyes: never will that happen
11-02-09 - 03:57 PM
ya isohunt has always been better than tpb
11-02-09 - 04:23 PM
Originally posted by oipolloi  
Guess that's why I'm waiting on the X-Files.


i got my x-files, all 30gbs of them, of iptorrents. took a few days, but that's a big file.
11-02-09 - 04:23 PM
isohunt sucks ass, no way to verify files and its overrun with gay moviexplayer infected TV shows.
11-02-09 - 04:35 PM
suprnova was the best
11-02-09 - 04:41 PM
Originally posted by mjoe  
suprnova was the best
11-02-09 - 04:43 PM
gnutella
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