For a brief, glorious moment, The Pirate Bay owned the official website of the very organization leading the global legal crusade against them.
That last line was the real point. The Pirate Bay had already survived police raids, seizures, and lawsuits. Their servers were constantly being taken down by authorities. So they turned the tables — briefly, legally, and hilariously — proving that the tools of ownership and control could be used against the owners themselves. the pirate bays.se
Here’s an interesting story about The Pirate Bay — not just about piracy, but about ideology, resilience, and a quixotic battle against the entire entertainment industry. In 2006, The Pirate Bay was already public enemy #1 for Hollywood. The site, run by a small group of Swedish activists from the anti-copyright group Piratbyrån, had become the world’s most visible symbol of file-sharing defiance. For a brief, glorious moment, The Pirate Bay
They didn’t just sit on it. They redirected ifpi.org to The Pirate Bay’s own homepage. For a few hours, anyone trying to visit the music industry’s main lobbying group found themselves staring at the familiar pirate-ship logo, search box, and a torrent of irony. Their servers were constantly being taken down by
One day, the site’s administrators noticed something odd: the domain ifpi.org (International Federation of the Phonographic Industry) was up for expiration. Without much thought, one of the TPB founders, Peter Sunde, decided to place a bid. They won the domain for a few hundred dollars.