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<blockquote data-quote="intel_inside" data-source="post: 17668325" data-attributes="member: 389081"><p><span style="font-size: 18px"><strong>Pirate Bay To Return In February? Countdown Timer Appears</strong></span></p><p></p><p style="text-align: center"><img src="http://s1.ibtimes.com/sites/www.ibtimes.com/files/styles/v2_article_large/public/2015/01/02/pirate.jpg?itok=IjyL7lyf" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p> <p style="text-align: center"></p><p></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span><span style="font-size: 12px">A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be </span><span style="font-size: 12px"></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"></span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="intel_inside, post: 17668325, member: 389081"] [SIZE=5][B]Pirate Bay To Return In February? Countdown Timer Appears[/B][/SIZE] [CENTER][IMG]http://s1.ibtimes.com/sites/www.ibtimes.com/files/styles/v2_article_large/public/2015/01/02/pirate.jpg?itok=IjyL7lyf[/IMG] [/CENTER] [SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be up and running on the first day of next month, but TorrentFreak observed that the javascript code used to display fireworks on the site’s home page has a “promising name”: allishere.js. This could mean that all of the site’s data could be backed up.Last month’s raid wasn’t the first time The Pirate Bay has gotten into trouble. The site was co-founded by Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm in 2003. Six years later, they were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The raid last month was the second time authorities seized the company’s computers and other equipment.The peer-to-peer file-sharing site brings in about $169,000 in advertising revenue each year, and was among one of the most popular torrent sites last year. [/SIZE][SIZE=3]A countdown timer on the popular BitTorrent site The Pirate Bay has begun counting down until Feb. 1, and many believe that’s when the service will come back online, as reported by TorrentFreak. The site was taken down last month after police raided servers in Sweden. It came back two weeks later, although it lacked functionality. Then, The Pirate Bay group posted a pirate flag, a timer that counted the days since the police raid and a secret code. Now, the counter has changed.The group hasn’t confirmed whether the site will be [/SIZE][SIZE=3] [/SIZE] [/QUOTE]
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