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2025: Two Decades of Piracy Reporting: TorrentFreak’s Retrospective
news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak • 1 January • 4 minutes
For writers and readers, news often comes and goes, with major headlines swiftly fading into the background.
Therefore, it can be a good idea to stop and reflect now and then. After covering piracy news and copyright challenges for more than two decades, we look back at some of the most memorable moments.
This certainly isn’t an exhaustive list, but it surely shows that times have changed. And they continue to do so.
2005 – 2009: The Formative Years
The adware-heavy “successor to Suprnova” fails and shuts down due to massive technical flaws and community distrust. (2005)
The Pirate Bay hits its first major milestone of 100,000 torrents as the mainstreaming of DHT enables trackerless downloads. (2005/2009)
Swedish police seize the site’s servers in Stockholm , marking the start of a criminal investigation into the site’s founders. (2006)
The Pirate Bay returns to the web just three days after the raid , establishing itself as an icon of digital defiance. (2006)
Technical evidence reveals Comcast is forging “RST” packets to sabotage BitTorrent uploads, a landmark moment for Net Neutrality. (2007)
Leaked internal emails expose the anti-piracy firm’s use of a “honeypot” website and aggressive sabotage tactics. (2007)
Global Gaming Factory X fails in its bizarre attempt to buy The Pirate Bay and list it on the stock market. (2009)
The founders of the site receive prison sentences and multi-million dollar fines in the closely followed “Spectrial” verdict . (2009)
A court order forces Mininova to delete all copyright-infringing content , effectively ending its dominance. (2009)
Public backlash from the TPB trial propels Sweden’s Pirate Party into the European Parliament . (2009)
2010 – 2014: Mega Legal Wars
The first wave of mass piracy lawsuits hits U.S. shores, targeting thousands of BitTorrent users at once. (2010)
ICE and DHS launch their first round of piracy-related domain name seizures as part of “Operation In Our Sites.” (2010)
The legendary Gnutella client shuts down under legal pressure and is briefly resurrected as the “Pirate Edition.” (2010)
Filehosting service MegaUpload launched the controversial “Mega Song,” featuring stars like P Diddy and Kanye West, sparking a legal battle with Universal. (2011)
New Zealand police raid Kim Dotcom’s estate , shuttering the world’s largest file-hosting empire in a global operation. (2012)
One of the internet’s largest torrent indices voluntarily shuts down in the wake of the Megaupload raid. (2012)
Massive digital protests and web blackouts successfully kill controversial US anti-piracy legislation. (2012)
High Court orders compel UK ISPs to implement nationwide blocks of The Pirate Bay with other sites following later. (2012)
A new open-source app, dubbed the “Netflix for Pirates,” simplifies torrenting into a user-friendly streaming experience. (2014)
Swedish police seize servers at a data center in Nacka, taking The Pirate Bay offline for several weeks. (2014)
Hackers leak unreleased films and sensitive emails following a catastrophic breach at Sony. (2014)
2015 – 2019: Slaying Torrent Giants
The world’s most popular movie uploader shuts down permanently following a secret legal deal with the MPAA. (2015)
US authorities shut down KickassTorrents, the world’s #1 piracy site at the time. The alleged operator, Artem Vaulin, was arrested in Poland and later escaped custody . (2016)
The internet’s most popular torrent meta-search engine abruptly ends its operations with a “farewell” message. (2016)
Following the fall of KAT, another giant, TorrentHound, voluntarily pulls the plug . (2016)
One of the last remaining torrent giants, ExtraTorrent, permanently shuts down its website. (2017)
The European Parliament passes the Copyright Directive , mandating “upload filters” for platforms. (2018)
The launch of Disney+ and other siloed services triggers a resurgence in BitTorrent piracy, which they were supposed to solve . (2019)
A Virginia jury orders ISP Cox to pay $1 billion for failing to disconnect repeat pirates. The legal battle is ongoing and landed at the Supreme Court in 2025. (2019)
2020 – 2025: Modern Piracy & AI
Global piracy traffic spikes by over 40% as a direct result of COVID-19 lockdowns. (2020)
The RIAA uses a DMCA notice to remove the popular tool from GitHub , sparking a massive developer revolt. (2020)
U.S. authorities arrest the leaders of Team Xecuter for selling Nintendo Switch hack tools. (2020)
The FBI seizes over 200 domains belonging to Z-Library and arrests its alleged operators. (2022)
The iconic site RARBG closes permanently , citing inflation and the war in Ukraine. (2023)
AI companies face scrutiny for using pirate datasets like “Books3” to train large language models. (2023)
In a historic operation, ACE and Vietnamese authorities shut down the FMovies syndicate . (2024)
After multiple “downtime” scares, TorrentGalaxy faces massive disruption and potential closure attempts. (2025)
Rightsholders increasingly seek site-blocking measures from DNS resolvers, starting with Quad9 in Germany . These requests later expand to other countries and providers, including Google. Cloudflare and OpenDNS . (2021/2025)
Lawmakers push for new bills like PADPA and ACPA to bring back SOPA-style site blocking. (2025)
The shadow library search engine triggered an unprecedented 750-million Google takedowns. At the end of the year, it also scraped 86 million Spotify tracks , (2025)
From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.