After years and years of legal battles with various organizations from the music and movie industry, The Pirate Bay was now officially blocked by Swedish ISP Bredbandsbolaget.
The decision came after a recent decision brought by Swedish appeals court, by which the ISP is required to block access to The Pirate Bay and more than 100 other domains connected to the site.
The whole conundrum started in 2014, when Universal Music, Sony Music, Warner Music, Nordisk Film, and the Swedish Film Industry filed a complaint, trying to force Bredbandsbolaget to block The Pirate Bay, along with streaming portal Swefilmer. The organizations filing the complaint argued that if Bredbandsbolaget refused to block the two sites, the ISP should be held responsible for any damages caused to copyright infringing material available on the two sites.
The ISP tried arguing that the company can’t censor the content on the internet, stating that it can only be responsible for providing the broadband service. Bredbandsbolaget won the case, with the court explaining that merely providing access to The Pirate Bay was not a crime. But, the copyright organizations appealed, with Swedish Patent and Market Court of Appeal overturning the initial decision, ordering Bredbandsbolaget to block users from accessing The Pirate Bay along with other proxy domains tied to The Pirate Bay for three years.
Even though being forced to block access to the most popular torrent site in the world, Bredbandsbolaget promised to legally fight against any potential future court order that could ask from the company to block other notable torrent sites such as Rarbg, Kickass Torrents, 1337X, Torrentz2, and ExtraTorrent.
The ISP made a statement in which the company said that “We are now forced to contest any future blocking demands. It is the only way for us and other Internet operators to ensure that private players should not have the last word regarding the content that should be accessible on the Internet.”
Users can still access The Pirate Bay from Sweden, they can visit domains not affected by the court decision, or they can just use a VPN. Still, the decision can have wide implications on the future of torrent sites, and not just in Sweden.