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Pirate Bay taken offline after raid

December 11, 2014

The Pirate Bay has been taken offline following a raid in Sweden, ending years of a police ‘cat and mouse’ chase with the file sharing website.


Swedish police raided a data centre in Stockholm on Tuesday, seizing servers, computers and other equipment.
The raid targeted a data centre in Nacka which is built into a “mountain”, according to the police.
This suggests that the raid took place at the Portlane facility, which is situated deep within Nacka’s bedrock for eco-friendly cooling and high-level security.
A short time after the raid – which was the result of a criminal complaint by anti-piracy group Rights Alliance – The Pirate Bay went offline, along with The Pirate Bay’s forum Suprbay.org, Bayimg.com andPastebay.net.
“There has been a crackdown on a server room in Greater Stockholm,” read a statement from Paul Pintér, Stockholm police’s national coordinator for IP enforcement. “This is in connection with violations of copyright law.”
Copyright authorities have been playing a game of cat-and-mouse with The Pirate Bay for years, in a bid to close down the site, which facilitates peer-to-peer file sharing using the BitTorrent protocol.
According to Torrent Freak, a site that reports on news about piracy and copyright law, the police operation took place in an area in Nacka, south-east of Stockholm. The area’s mountainous terrain is used as a natural cooling system for computer servers.
Torrent Freak added that a number of smaller torrent websites, or sites related to the activity, had also gone down.
In the UK, internet service providers (ISPs) were ordered by the High Court to block access to the site in 2012. Other countries rolled out similar measures.
The effectiveness of such blocks has been disputed. Sites will evade them by changing domains, or users will utilise proxies to circumvent them.
In 2012, The Pirate Bay announced it was to move its site to the cloud – internet-based storage, which can be shared across a variety of locations – so that raids would apparently be ineffective.

Uncategorized security, UK

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