Pirate Bay Trades Physical Servers for Cloud-Based Virtual Machines
By Karla Robinson
October 19, 2012
October 19, 2012
- “All attempts to attack The Pirate Bay from now on is an attack on everything and nothing,” the service stated on its Facebook page with the announcement that it has traded out its physical servers for virtual machines on cloud services.
- “By hosting its infrastructure in multiple data centers and even multiple countries, the widely used torrent site says it will avoid being shut down by authorities targeting BitTorrent sites,” Ars Technica writes. “It has been the target of raids on previous occasions, and has suffered downtime because of the types of IT hassles that afflict most businesses. Moving to the cloud will help on both counts.”
- In a related article, TorrentFreak reports that The Pirate Bay is now hosted by several cloud hosting providers in two countries, and providers don’t know they’re hosting the service. “All the important data is backed up externally on VMs that can be reinstalled at cloud hosting providers anywhere in the world,” notes the post.
- Converting to the cloud also has IT benefits, such as avoiding going offline for reasons like broken power distribution units — a problem The Pirate Bay faced in the past.
- “If one cloud-provider cuts us off, goes offline or goes bankrupt, we can just buy new virtual servers from the next provider,” a Pirate Bay spokesperson told TorrentFreak. “Then we only have to upload the VM-images and reconfigure the load-balancer to get the site up and running again.”
- There are still ways for authorities to take The Pirate Bay offline despite the service’s claims. ExtremeTech also notes that installing a new load balancer is not easy or cheap.
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