Courtesy of Chris Cieri

It appears the ship has sailed. Or sunk, as it were. On Tuesday morning, the server rooms of the massive peer-to-peer torrent site The Pirate Bay were raided by Swedish police, and the site has been down ever since. Long toted as the “most resilient website on the internet,” the Pirate Bay has a long history of takedowns and arrests, but each time was restored within a matter of days. However, it appears that this takedown may be their last.

Depending on who you ask, the Pirate Bay and its various progeny across the internet is either a massive anti-copyright criminal enterprise or a righteous crusade against draconian digital rights management laws.

It’s certainly one of the largest of its kind – the site had almost 22 million users before the shutdown, putting it far ahead of other large peer-to-peer torrenting sites such as Extratorrent or KAT. It’s consistently been on the forefront of distributing controversial material, including celebrity photo hacks and the recent invasion of Sony that released several upcoming high budget films such as “Fury” and “Annie.”

These and other copyright violations have lead to constant attacks by companies such as Warner and Columbia, as well as international pressure from national regulatory bodies for copyright. The owners of the site have contested that since materials are downloaded from peer links, and not the site itself, the framework of their operation is not actually illegal, though this claim was struck down by a Swedish court several years ago.

Despite numerous cyberattacks and a takedown in 2006 that lead to the arrests of two of its members, the site has always remained open, even mocking its detractors on the main page as attempt after attempt failed to shut it down.

This final attack, however, appears to have been fatal. Swedish police have seized a datacenter containing an unknown number of servers and management computers for the piracy network. Several members were also arrested. While a site mirror in Costa Rica remains available, it is unknown for how much longer. It may disappear as the results of the raid are finalized.

And while the site’s disappearance may anger its many millions of users, even some of its previous owners won’t be sorry to see it go. Peter Sunde, one of the site’s original founders and spokespeople, served over six months in prison for his involvement with the network. Sunde is grateful for the takedown of a project he feels has become soulless and money-grubbing.

Blaming the onset of “distasteful ads” for the sites decline, he hopes that the removal of the site will allow the burden of copyright evasion to fall into more scrupulous hands.

As scrupulous as a pirate can be, anyway.

Copeland is a member of the class of 2015.



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