Five days since the world’s most prominent torrent site, The Pirate Bay, went missing in the high seas, replacement sites are clamoring for its spot.
In case you’re not one of TPB’s millions of regular users, it’s pretty simple. It’s a search engine to download signifiers files called torrents, which in turn allow people who use filesharing programs like BitTorrent to download particular files from each other. Like pretty much any heavily contested technology, it’s frequently used for illegal purposes—like massive piracy—but also has plenty of legitimate uses, like as an easy way to release a software expansion.
In theory, nothing should be able to keep The Pirate Bay down. It had to change server locations at least nine times in 2013, and yet it never spent as long offline as it has this week. And that’s confusing, too—having moved most of its operation to the cloud, there’s little that can even physically be raided.
In the meantime, a number of sites have popped up, all using a variation of TPB’s famous pirate ship logo. (It should go without saying that not only do we not condone illegal activity, we can’t vouch for the safety of using any of these sites.)
Some sites that purport to be TPB, like thepiratebay.net, redirect to Kickass Torrents, one of the most prominent alternatives to TPB. That seems to be the work of someone who just wants to keep people downloading, and not an attempt to get Kickass a bigger market share.
“We don’t own or manage such websites,” Kickass’s founder, who declined to be named or to share where Kickass is based, told the Daily Dot over chat. “There is an increase in traffic after TPB’s Raid,” the founder admitted.
Some sites aren’t afraid to make an association explicit. Another of the biggest runners-up, Isohunt, created a clone site, oldpiratebay.org, which also has a similar look, albeit with and older type script. “As you probably know now the beloved Pirate Bay website is gone for now,” it reads. “In its honor we’re making the oldpiratebay.org search. We, the Isohunt team, copied the database of Pirate Bay in order to save it for generations of users.”
Other sites that look and function exactly like the old TPB have murkier origins. thepiratebay.cr appears functional, though most of the site’s administrative pages, like its contact page, are blank. Like the old TPB site, it names a Bitcoin wallet if someone wants to tip, and it seems to be the one possessed by TPB users, having received donations under that name since May 2013.
Is that one the work of the usual administrators of TPB? No one’s talking yet. But maybe there’s not much reason for concern. “[The raid]” doesn’t bother me in the slightest,” Kickass’s founder said. “I have faith that TPB will be back up and running shortly.”
Illustration by Fernando Alfonso III