Controversial pirate collective releases new software to elude censorship

Pirate Bay launches web browser to dodge filters

UK residents are now able to access The Pirate Bay using a dedicated web browser designed by the controversial organisation.

Celebrating its 10th anniversary, The Pirate Bay has released a new download called PirateBrowser. It’s effectively a functional web browser that will allow users to bypass ISP filters that typically block access to the site, as is found in countries such as the UK, the Netherlands and Italy.

The software is built on Firefox 23. TorrentFreak reports that a Windows version is available now with Mac and Linux versions soon to follow.

Upon booting it also offers pre-programmed bookmark access to a host of Torrent providers.

The Pirate Bay is reportedly working on new tech that would allow users to store and distribute entire websites, such as The Pirate Bay itself. The idea is that these sites will exist without a public facing website, thus making their blocking or enforced closure nearly impossible.

This story was originally published on our sister site MCV

About MCV Staff

Check Also

playruo [Industry news] Playruo raises €2.1 million to become the leading platform for testing and sharing video games via streaming

[Industry news] Playruo raises €2.1 million to become the leading platform for testing and sharing video games via streaming

Playruo, a professional cloud gaming solution for video game studios and publishers, has announced it has completed a €2.1 million funding round. Led by investment funds Kameha Ventures and Blast Club, this new funding round will accelerate the large-scale commercialisation of Playruo’s services: