

Some Internet companies are trying to distance themselves from the opportunities The Pirate Bay provides for illegal file-sharing. But by switching to magnet links, The Pirate Bay is taking options off the table for law enforcement agencies short of outright censorship of the site. There’s already legal precedent stating that The Pirate Bay is complicit in copyright infringement. This is a game of chicken against governments who intervene on the Internet to protect copyright holders. And even if that did happen, the magnet links could just pop back up somewhere else. forbid access to a part of The Pirate Bay. The only way to stop magnet links is to actually block the exchange of the link in the first place, i.e. No one can tell whether or not you downloaded the file. You can pass the link around however you want and open it using any compatible application.

There’s no file living on The Pirate Bay’s servers it’s just a link inside a page. Oh yeah, and unless a government is willing to shut down a whole Web page using out-and-out censorship tactics, magnet links can’t be stopped. Magnet links don’t break as easily, and they’re more bandwidth-efficient for people who mirror the linked files. “Sort of.” The famed torrent site will now use magnet links. “Today marks the end of an era,” the Pirate Bay blog says.
