The Pirate Bays.se |link| (2026)

To this day, The Pirate Bay lives on, limping from domain to domain (the original .org long gone), while the IFPI still exists. But for one afternoon in 2006, a bunch of pirates in Stockholm made the music industry’s homepage say exactly what they wanted it to say: “Welcome. The Pirate Bay. The world’s largest BitTorrent tracker.”

The IFPI eventually got the domain back. But the story became legend among file-sharers. It wasn’t about stealing music or movies. It was about flipping the script: You keep trying to erase us from the internet. Watch us erase you — just for a laugh. the pirate bays.se

For a brief, glorious moment, The Pirate Bay owned the official website of the very organization leading the global legal crusade against them. To this day, The Pirate Bay lives on,

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. The world’s largest BitTorrent tracker

The IFPI was furious. They scrambled to regain control, threatening legal action and domain registrars. The Pirate Bay, with deadpan Scandinavian humor, released a statement: “We just wanted to show them how easy it is to take someone’s domain name. You know, like they do with our servers.”

To this day, The Pirate Bay lives on, limping from domain to domain (the original .org long gone), while the IFPI still exists. But for one afternoon in 2006, a bunch of pirates in Stockholm made the music industry’s homepage say exactly what they wanted it to say: “Welcome. The Pirate Bay. The world’s largest BitTorrent tracker.”

The IFPI eventually got the domain back. But the story became legend among file-sharers. It wasn’t about stealing music or movies. It was about flipping the script: You keep trying to erase us from the internet. Watch us erase you — just for a laugh.

For a brief, glorious moment, The Pirate Bay owned the official website of the very organization leading the global legal crusade against them.

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.

The IFPI was furious. They scrambled to regain control, threatening legal action and domain registrars. The Pirate Bay, with deadpan Scandinavian humor, released a statement: “We just wanted to show them how easy it is to take someone’s domain name. You know, like they do with our servers.”