The Pirate Bay Remains Resilient, 20 Years After the Raid

(torrentfreak.com)

78 points | by speckx 1 hour ago

7 comments

  • Unai 15 minutes ago
    I haven't visited a torrent site since I found out I could search for them from within qBittorrent.
    • Hoodedcrow 1 minute ago
      I don't think I'd prefer this, tbh. I would want to see the whole topic information when choosing what exact torrent to download. Is it marked "verified" or "questionable"? If it's "questionable", is it for some arbitrary formality, or something like "the audio is desynced"? Are there many different dubs (because I'd rather prefer not to have them, as they're bloating the files?)...
  • TFNA 18 minutes ago
    When it comes to films, I torrent exclusively remuxes or whole Blu-Ray images. TPB hasn't been relevant for me for the last 15 years or more, since it never had a culture of such large file sizes, just small re-encodes. I wonder why, because obviously that data doesn't have to pass through TPB's own servers.
    • dmos62 12 minutes ago
      Where do you find those? I use 1337 and dht search engines. Can't be bothered to fiddle with private trackers. Wondering if you found something better.
  • t1234s 18 minutes ago
    If its not on their top 100/48 hr list then its not worth watching.
  • palmotea 42 minutes ago
    > For now, the site remains online, twenty years after Hollywood thought it had seen the last of it. And whoever is in charge today, will likely do everything possible to keep it that way.

    I'm vaguely aware that other people than the original group are running it now.

    Also, I don't torrent much, but it seems pretty stagnant and dead. It's been occasionally useful to me to find older stuff that doesn't seem to be well represented on newer (public) sites.

    • Jeremy1026 37 minutes ago
      I've never not found something that has been publicly released on it. Though, I don't typically stray too far from the mainstream path for the media I'm looking for.
    • voidUpdate 26 minutes ago
      I can absolutely find new stuff on there. It took Project Hail Mary a little while to get on there, presumably because it was a cinema release only for quite a while but a good quality version popped up after a couple of weeks, and a bad quality "guy holding a camcorder in the cinema" version showed up after about 1 week, IIRC
      • busterarm 25 minutes ago
        once it hit streaming services the webrip was on it within hours.
        • voidUpdate 23 minutes ago
          I don't recall exactly when it went onto streaming, but I'm pretty sure I got a good quality version before that. It may have been released for streaming in other regions earlier than I thought though, I don't keep super up to date with that sort of thing, as I generally don't watch movies super soon after they're released
        • everyone 18 minutes ago
          I find the stream rips to be really shitty quality.. The original source is very low bitrate, compressed tae fuck. I find for stream rips from netflix for example I need to download a 4k rip in order to watch in 1080, and that's acceptable.
    • 1970-01-01 30 minutes ago
      /top/48hall seems pretty fresh and healthy. What do you mean by stagnant?
    • dyauspitr 31 minutes ago
      Torrenting is alive and well… for recent releases and new stuff. All the old stuff is pretty hard to find now. When demonoid was around you could find just about everything.
      • everyone 15 minutes ago
        That's the tragedy of the MAFIAA death throes period imo.. With all their lawsuits and bullshit they never even slowed down the big public trackers and torrents of the popular stuff they were trying to stop being shared.. Instead they killed loads of small private trackers which housed exquisitely curated collections of stuff that wasn't available anywhere else for neither love nor money.
    • moi2388 26 minutes ago
      I use Stremio with pirate bay torrents. There literally isn’t anything that came out and isn’t on there.
    • xnx 34 minutes ago
      > on newer (public) sites

      Example of said sites?

      • Retr0id 30 minutes ago
        rutracker, 1337x, nyaa are the first that come to mind.
      • johncoltrane 29 minutes ago
        ext in tonga
  • tokai 15 minutes ago
    The pirate bay raid is a good example of the kind of soft power the US has lost with their recent behavior. Hard to imagine Stockholm police being as receptive nowadays.

    edit: I'm very sorry for making a relevant comment that extrapolate on the content of the shared article.

    • everyone 11 minutes ago
      Yes! thank fuck!
    • han1 6 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • everyone 22 minutes ago
    <3 Still a great public tracker. We absolutely need people who will run sites like this and crack and bypass stiff like Denuvo and so on. We really do need to keep these sort of skills, tools, and communities alive to be able to resist digital oppression and techno-fascists. Sounds corny as hell but it's true imo.
  • alex1138 16 minutes ago
    So not to hijack this thread or anything but there's one good metric (if nothing else... the fact FB overwrote your email while Google seems to believe in data liberation, and fewer breaches) to tell apart the difference between those two companies

    Google had been asked to remove Pirate Bay in results. They didn't. On Google, and I don't really know how it changed over the years, but there'd be a notice about links removed due to DMCA, if it came to that, basically. (Okay, Youtube, which they own, has always been a bit aggressive, and that isn't nothing)

    Facebook? Facebook wouldn't let you SEND a link to PB in private messages. It still deletes your post now if you link Anna's Archive. This after apparently heavily scraping LibGen

    I don't love Google for a lot of reasons but I damn well feel better using it compared to Mr. "Dumb Fucks"