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Piracy Cloud Networking The Internet IT

The Raid-Proof Hosting Technology Behind 'The Pirate Bay' 144

HughPickens.com writes Ernesto reports at TorrentFreak that despite its massive presence the Pirate Bay doesn't have a giant server park but operates from the cloud, on virtual machines that can be quickly moved if needed. The site uses 21 "virtual machines" (VMs) hosted at different providers, up four machines from two years ago, in part due to the steady increase in traffic. Eight of the VMs are used for serving the web pages, searches take up another six machines, and the site's database currently runs on two VMs. The remaining five virtual machines are used for load balancing, statistics, the proxy site on port 80, torrent storage and for the controller. In total the VMs use 182 GB of RAM and 94 CPU cores. The total storage capacity is 620 GB. One interesting aspect of The Pirate Bay is that all virtual machines are hosted with commercial cloud hosting providers, who have no clue that The Pirate Bay is among their customers. "Moving to the cloud lets TPB move from country to country, crossing borders seamlessly without downtime. All the servers don't even have to be hosted with the same provider, or even on the same continent." All traffic goes through the load balancer, which masks what the other VMs are doing. This also means that none of the IP-addresses of the cloud hosting providers are publicly linked to TPB. For now, the most vulnerable spot appears to be the site's domain. Just last year TPB burnt through five separate domain names due to takedown threats from registrars. But then again, this doesn't appear to be much of a concern for TPB as the operators have dozens of alternative domain names standing by.
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The Raid-Proof Hosting Technology Behind 'The Pirate Bay'

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  • RAID-proof? (Score:5, Funny)

    by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Monday September 22, 2014 @08:03AM (#47963305)
    I mean, 620 GB of storage isn't much, but I'm sure some people would want to RAID it anyway. Although I've heard that Police RAID only works with write-only storage...
  • by Thanshin ( 1188877 ) on Monday September 22, 2014 @08:19AM (#47963355)

    Raids only make sites become raid-proof. Just as monitoring creates encryption and oppression creates rebellion.

    But of course one cannot fight the core problem when the core problem is oneself.

    • Sure one can fight oneself. One can start by shooting oneself in the foot. ;-)
  • Are they making $ off this or just doing it for the lulz?

    • by Danathar ( 267989 ) on Monday September 22, 2014 @08:25AM (#47963399) Journal

      Both. You can make money and have the lulz...

    • by rasmusbr ( 2186518 ) on Monday September 22, 2014 @08:32AM (#47963421)

      When you click the search box it often triggers a popup ad. I would imagine that ad sees hundreds of millions of impressions per month, which would translate to hundreds of thousands of dollars in monthly revenue at an average of $1 per 1000 impressions.

      There are also some regular ads on the site. They could easily be making more than $10 million a year in ad revenue.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Yeah, but who would want to advertise on a site frequented almost exclusively by cheapskates who would rather steal content than pay for it? Even if they found your ad compelling, they're way more likely to steal your product than buy it.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 22, 2014 @08:54AM (#47963535)

          Studies have consistently shown that people who pirate things like movies, albums, etc are also far more likely to purchase them as well. So, the people advertising on TPB are the ones smart enough to ignore the RIAA's and MPAA's misled war against their best customers.

          Also, you can answer your own question for yourself by simply going to TPB and seeing what kind of ads they have.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Copying, downloading or illegally streaming, none of those constitute stealing. Nice try though.

          Oh, and by the way, those cheapskates? Yeah not so much. Turns out there are a number of different reasons people resort to piracy to get what they want. Unsurprisingly, price really has very little to do with it. I'd link a bunch of articles for your dumb ass to read, but, yeah what's the point?

          • by Rich0 ( 548339 ) on Monday September 22, 2014 @09:16AM (#47963649) Homepage

            Yup. I recently bought a game on a steam sale. For as little as I paid for it, the hassle of pirating it would not have been worth it.

            On the other hand, apparently many parts of the game aren't actually working now due to a bad update. Of course, the advantage of Steam is that I'll probably get that update automatically within a few days. On the other hand, if I had obtained it from TPB I probably would be playing it now instead of waiting, since the pirated version would be an older known-good one (though obviously missing whatever was in that update).

            I also saw a "# activations remaining" message when registering my CD key with the game, which wasn't terribly comforting. I suspect that Valve would take care of any actual issues down the road, but who knows, maybe in 10 years I'll end up stopping by TPB to get a crack for the game that I just bought.

            Stuff like this is why there is piracy.

          • If you continue to try and disaccosiate the lablel "stealing" because of the implication that its something that everyone agrees is wrong, I'm not going to believe that your motives have nothing to do with the fact that they are availible without charge.

            It really looks like you are trying to say " Even though its illegal, and I'm doing it to get free stuff, don't think bad of me because I don't like thinking of myself as someone who does bad things". Its got all of the logic and reasoning of a three year o

            • If you continue to try and disaccosiate the lablel "stealing" because of the implication that its something that everyone agrees is wrong, I'm not going to believe that your motives have nothing to do with the fact that they are availible without charge.

              It really looks like you are trying to say " Even though its illegal, and I'm doing it to get free stuff, don't think bad of me because I don't like thinking of myself as someone who does bad things". Its got all of the logic and reasoning of a three year old.

              People try to disassociate pirating from stealing because stealing is set thing where you, without permission take things that belong to other people and keep them for yourself. Which is not what pirating is. Pirating is copyright infringement, so call it that instead of something that's almost kinda but not really like it but sounds much worse. Even a three year old could tell the difference between taking something and making a copy.

              • Both Stealing and Copyright infrigment are both illegal in most jursisdictions.

                So specifying one over the other, just reeks of attempting to get rid of a guilty concious.

                Which runs counter to the self professed notion of not being a cheap skate.

                The poster I was replying to feels guilty about his actions, no doubt.

                • Both Stealing and Copyright infrigment are both illegal in most jursisdictions. So specifying one over the other, just reeks of attempting to get rid of a guilty concious.

                  So are murder, rape, fraud, drug use and loads of other things but you don't say it's them. You're trying to call a spade a digger when they're not the same.

        • Most of the ads are for things that you can't pirate, like online casinos, free to play games, "dating" sites...

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Unlikely. The userbase they have is much more likely to block ads, there is also no way they can get as much for ads as the more legit pages.

    • by Thanshin ( 1188877 ) on Monday September 22, 2014 @08:41AM (#47963461)

      Some people out there have motivations other than "money" and "lulz".

      Things like "respect of one's peers", "ideology", "non-conformism" or even "the challenge of doing something hard no one else can do", can make some people take quite large risks.

  • The Pirate Bay definitely deserves praise for staying up, despite being famous and constantly attacked by the media mafia. They bring hope that one day we may live in a world where sharing of knowledge, art and data is encouraged rather that prosecuted, and that some of today's files will survive until then, as well.

    It will require a lot of work until we get there in the social realm (fighting the abusive law). It may help if technical solutions exist (decentralization, anonymity, security) that allow eve

  • TPB will get sued in a favorable location for the plaintiff. The plaintiff will use the judgment to go after TPB bank accounts. The back accounts are much harder to hide than the servers because TPB wants to get paid for the ads it displays.
  • Interesting that registrars will threaten sites that assist in obtaining illegal copies of software or media, but will do nothing whatsoever when they are shown that their customers are selling kiddie porn, illegal / counterfeit drugs, counterfeit anything else, etc...
  • There are some on the wikipedia page but I suspect some of them are outdated given what's said in the article. I was interested in reading about their VM setup and how they communicate with each other and what platform they're using, etc, but I can't find any details anywhere. I went through their blog, their forums, the affiliated articles, etc. Does anyone know where one might find more details of their infrastructure?

  • That soon a DEA SWAT team will attack VMWare development facilities and smash everything up, using trumped-up drug charges.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Ernesto reports at TorrentFreak that despite its massive presence the Pirate Bay doesn't have a giant server park but operates from my butt, on virtual machines that can be quickly moved if needed.
    [...]
    One interesting aspect of The Pirate Bay is that all virtual machines are hosted with commercial butt hosting providers, who have no clue that The Pirate Bay is among their customers. "Moving to my butt lets TPB move from country to country, crossing borders seamlessly without downtime. [...]"

    Moments like this remind me why I installed that firefox extension [mozilla.org].

  • The technology listed is not raid-proof, only raid-resistant.

    It is still vulnerable to legal attack IF the governments in the countries where the servers are located are willing to use subpeonas or other means to "quietly" (i.e. without TPB finding out) determine what the next "downstream" server is until they have a full list, then do a coordinated takedown.

    All it takes to stop this is to make sure that at least some key servers are in countries in which such court orders could not be legally issued.

    The su

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