Piracy never changes. For years it has made copyright owners furious, and for years the efforts to stop it have fallen short. 2013 was no different.
The Pirate Bay has thwarted nation-wide ISP blockades, domain changes and the continuing imprisonment of co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm with a 50 percent increase in uploads over the last year. This raises the number of torrent files available on the site to 74,195 as of this writing, an all-time high.
The number of torrents indexed has reached a staggering 2.8 million, which are shared by over 18 million people if both seeds and leechers are included. About half of the sharing volume is devoted entirely to video, followed by audio (at 17 percent) and porn (at 13 percent). Surprisingly, games and software make up only 5 percent of share volume each.
While The Pirate Bay remains healthy in spite of efforts by copyright holders, corporations and even nations to stop it, the war against piracy continues. The site spent much of the last month fighting a running battle against copyright holders, which resulted in several domain name changes as previous domains were seized, forcing the site to move.
The Pirate Bay hopes to thwart future domain seizures with a peer-to-peer browser (predictably named PirateBrowser) which will act as the site’s main hub and circumvent domain name seizures. Of course, the site’s enemies will no doubt try to find a way to limit the browser’s distribution. While uploads have grown, the drama surrounding the world’s most well-known source of torrents is certainly far from over.