Several people have been warning users to avoid The Pirate Bay, due to CloudFlare integration and potential FBI IP bugs. There are even suggestions that the FBI has been involved in the site's somewhat mysterious rebirth.
Nobody knows who really runs The Pirate Bay, but the old moderation team were all removed as part of the relaunch. The Pirate Bay now allows people to 'report' malicious torrents instead of having a moderation team.
Some claim the FBI re-launched The Pirate Bay or had connections to the owners, implanting IP bugs on all torrent’s uploaded for investigation. The Pirate Bay has denied these accusations, claiming CloudFlare is only a temporary measure to help with the influx of traffic on the torrenting site.
CloudFlare is a cloud server provider, but is based in the US. Many privacy advocates claim CloudFlare is not a safe tool, due to the potential warrant-less searches from the FBI and other US agencies. On the topic of working with the FBI, The Pirate Bay has not responded, but TorrentFreak claims the accusations are "complete nonsense" but said that "general security concerns of using a US-based service are legitimate".
What does SoylentNews think? Is it wise to stay away?
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday February 12 2015, @04:09PM
Is the safest place to host to avoid the FBI servers in Iran? Sealand? Do we crowd-fund a network of LEO satellites that each hold the entire content of the Library of Congress and every other bit of content known to mankind? Do we seed mini-servers with wifi all around the world doing the same?
Does that keep @Phoenix666 safe when he torrents something?
Washington DC delenda est.
(Score: 1) by linuxrocks123 on Thursday February 12 2015, @04:20PM
LEO satellites might sound like a good plan NOW, but Ronald Reagan's Star Wars system will soon put and end to that!
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday February 12 2015, @06:09PM
Maybe we should attach servers to the undercarriages of the Bentleys and Rolls of the 1%, so they can serve the masses everywhere they go and eventually be the ones to get sued for copyright infringement when they're caught. All we need is a mole in the repair shop of a top-end auto dealership... Or we could stick them to the undersides of tables in Starbucks and power them with the smell of over-roasted coffee beans (on second thought, nah, they'd overload).
Washington DC delenda est.