Pirate Bay, which is one of the most targeted and hard-to-kill site is once again back again with its unique and familiar “.se” URL that offers a database, which is appears to be fairly intact with different torrent sites. Pirate Bay is well known and famed destination for those who want to have pirated material without any cost or seek for sharing of information through bit torrent technology or other content choice techniques. The server of Pirate Bay, which is at Nacka station near Stockholm, Sweden, was down from past two months, but before someday it back online. It appears that in the period of its outage, data loss has been kept to a minimum.
It was one of the most serious threats for Pirate Bay as website has been in operation from 2003and it was found that founders are guilty for assisting copy right infringement under the law of Sweden in 2009 and due to that after trial in 2006 a panel of judges ask the founders to put the site down for few months which was second of June 2006, but later that site recorded huge traffic in terms of download and users in the same year after incident. According to the reports of TorrentFreak, “The new version of The Pirate Bay website is operationally as well as functionally very similar¸ but when it comes to moderation panel, so it lacks for TPB staff that has resulted in some staff claiming, which can be negative point for website. As per the other sources, officials are planning to launch their own version, but we can’t ignore the fact that a large number of users and as well as subscribers are familiar with old URL, which can be big problem for TPB.
On December 2014, raid from last year cause an impact in a number of mirrors and archives, which is one of the form of other leading torrent site that is known as IsoHunt, which also released the tool that would provide a capability to anyone who wanted to create their own TPB mirror. In the starting of 2015, a countdown appeared ticking down till the activation of The Pirate Bay and finally on January 31 2015, website return at the old domain. The major question is that what happen to site traffic and as well as torrent use in the most recent raid. Few of the evidences are suggesting that TPB’s had little closure effect on piracy rates for the short terms, but in long terms it declines at least seem unlikely.
Apart from successfully reviving the most notorious and important file-sharing site, few sources are pointing out that many key staffers are ready to lift up their own TPB. However currently site doesn’t have any RSS feeds due to lack of ability to register new accounts whereas; some of the sites subpages are start to return on 404 errors. It seems that latest uploads are from 9th December 2014, when site return online and on the same day TPB’s servers were raided.