The Pirate Bay is Pretty Broken Right Now But Can Be Coaxed Back to Life

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The Pirate Bay retained its position as the world's most popular torrent site at the start of 2021 but all is not well. While the site is up and accessible for most, the index is suffering significant technical problems that due to their confusing nature, have many users scratching their heads. Nevertheless, there are still options to coax it back to life.

In file-sharing terms, The Pirate Bay has been around almost forever. Launched in 2003, the torrent index has overcome every hurdle put in its way while other competitors have succumbed to various pressures.

Indeed, even after all these years, The Pirate Bay is still a file-sharing giant. As revealed in our latest list of most visited torrent site, the site is still at the top of the heap, successfully pulling in more traffic than rivals including YTS.mx, 1337x, and RARBG.

But, just two weeks into the year, The Pirate Bay is currently giving off distress signals that are not only rendering the site unusable for the average user but also making it an extremely confusing experience for anyone, even those with the patience to persevere.

Content is Still Being Uploaded

While some users may visit The Pirate Bay looking for specific named content, there are millions who return to the site looking for the latest content recently uploaded. This is achievable by pressing the ‘Recent Torrents’ button on the homepage and the feature works pretty much as expected.

But while new content is still being uploaded every day, visitors will notice that The Pirate Bay’s ability to determine how many seeds and leechers there are on each torrent is completely broken. While not a guaranteed method of determining a high-quality torrent, these statistics are extremely useful when making the decision of which torrent to obtain. At the moment there is no useful data, and this is a problem on a couple of fronts.

No Seed and Leech Information Causing Issues

More seeds usually translate to faster downloads, something which all torrent users like to enjoy wherever possible. With no indication on the site, information that would allow users to pick the best or most popular/favored torrent is removed from the equation.

The small but significant plus point for file-sharers, however, is that just because The Pirate Bay isn’t displaying seed and leech data, it doesn’t necessarily follow that they don’t exist in the countless thousands of swarms as well. They are still there, it’s just that the site isn’t showing them at the moment. And that leads to other problems too.

The Top 100 Torrents List

Visitors who browse the site looking for something interesting without a specific idea of what they want are often guided by the popularity of torrents, i.e the number of seeds and leechers. Since we know that the site can’t provide those stats at the moment, there’s a huge knock-on effect for all of the features on the site that rely on that data to provide search results.

For example, those who like to browse the Top 100 Torrents list are now faced with a list of torrents from 16 years ago, with shows like South Park and Friends plus Xbox 360 games topping the list. This makes it pretty clear that without the seeds and leechers count, The Pirate Bay’s code defaults to displaying the oldest content first.

The only way to partially solve the problem is by using the ’48HR’ option on The Pirate Bay’s search page to select specific content that has only been uploaded during the last two days. That seems to work but with the seeds and leechers stats still missing, it’s a more laborious affair than usual and the user experience suffers tremendously as a result.

Browsing Torrents Still Works, Kind of…

Selecting the ‘Browse Torrents’ link on the main page still leads to the option to wander through the Pirate Bay’s indexes by content type, i.e movies, music or TV shows. The other plus is that the site shows the most-recently uploaded content first, which is what many users are looking for.

Yet again, however, the lack of any seed and leecher count severely disrupts the user’s ability to make an informed choice when selecting a torrent. These numbers are often taken for granted but this technical issue appears to be fundamental to the site’s current problems.

We haven’t seen the site’s code but looking at the current chaos, addressing what should be a relatively minor fix might bring the entire site back to functionality. That raises the prospect of a fairly rapid return to form. When TPB’s operator gets round to it.

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