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Pirate Bay launches easy anti-censorship browser
Pirate Bay launches easy anti-censorship browser
The Pirate Bay has released a self-configured browser package, which allows users to skate around the anti-piracy censorship of certain governments. Now one can access TPB and other file-sharing websites blocked by internet providers in ‘one click’.
RT,
13
August, 2013
The
team running the Pirate Bay (TPB) – one of the web’s largest
file-sharing sites – has launched a special PirateBrowser that
allows users “to circumvent censorship that certain countries
impose onto their citizens.”
The
launch comes as TPB celebrates 10 years of harboring ‘pirated’
and other online content.
Rather
than being standalone software, PirateBrowser is a combination – or
a ‘bundle’ – of a portable version of the Firefox internet
browser and a popular client of the anonymous Tor network, Vidalia.
The package is said to have the FoxyProxy add-on and “some custom
configs” built in, while assuring that none of the programs had
been modified, and that it does not contain any adware, trojans, or
toolbars.
“It’s
a simple one-click browser that circumvents censorship and blockades
and makes the site instantly available and accessible. No bundled
ad-ware, toolbars or other crap, just a pre-configured Firefox
browser,” a TPB administrator nicknamed Winston said in a release
message.
He
also urged people to recommend PirateBrowser to anyone, who “can’t
access TPB or other torrents-sites because they are blocked.”
According
to information posted on piratebrowser.com, countries that have
blocked access to the Pirate Bay include Iran, North Korea, United
Kingdom, the Netherlands, Belgium, Finland, Denmark, Italy and
Ireland.
While
enabling the internet users in those countries “to remove limits on
accessing websites your government doesn’t want you to know about,”
PirateBrowser does not guarantee web anonymity. To ensure complete
anonymity, its compilers recommend using VPN (Virtual Private
Network) services.
The
pre-configured browser’s release is the latest effort by the Pirate
Bay to disregard the growing number of legal actions mounted against
it and other file-sharing websites, as well as against the
distribution of copyright-infringing materials on the web in general.
Most
recently, corporate giants EMI, Sony, Warner Music and Universal won
a lawsuit against TPB in Ireland. A local court on June 12 ruled that
all major Irish ISPs must block access to The Pirate Bay in 30 days’
time.
Similar
court decisions were taken in the UK and the Netherlands last year.
Moreover, after a complaint by Dutch entertainment industry’s
anti-piracy association BREIN, a court in The Hague ordered the
Pirate Party of the Netherlands to stop publicizing ways to
circumvent the block. The party claimed it was legally banned even
from giving a website link to the well-known Tor project.
Facebook
and Microsoft’s Windows Live Messenger have also been blocking all
messages containing links to the Pirate Bay. While Facebook claimed
it has the right to use blocks on links where there is a
“demonstrated disregard for intellectual property rights” based
on their terms of service, Microsoft simply started flagging such
links as “unsafe.”
The
efficiency of all such limitations have been questioned by internet
experts, as the use of proxy servers have continued to grant an easy
access to the blocked websites for those craving for free media file
content. The new TPB tool could thus mark a further success of free
internet activists in their fight against the corporate
rights-holders, as it brings the same practice to a wider audience of
less experienced users
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