10/15/2012

Not All Pirates Are Out At Sea: The Pirate Bay Website Goes Down

Sometimes it’s not terrorists taking sites down in cyber-attacks. Sometimes it’s governments taking sites down in an effort to thwart seeding efforts on torrent websites. What is seeding, you may ask? Seeding is when individuals go to a torrent site, download content that has been pirated and then use their computers to upload (or seed) content to the site for others to share. Governments across the world have been at war with these torrent sites. Pirate Bay has always seemed to be the one site they couldn’t take down – until recently.

Pirate Bay, the untouchable torrent website, actually did go down for a couple of days. The servers went down, apparently due to a government attack, and then they went back up again. How? Because Pirate Bay had a backup plan. Those who operate Pirate Bay know that there is always a risk of an attack and they are ready to communicate with Pirate Bay members and get their site up and running as quickly as possible when bad things happen (or good things if you’re on the other side of the fence when it comes to pirating software, movies and music).

What Can We Learn from the Pirates?

There are those who cheer Pirate Bay on and there are those who yearn to see the demise of this seemingly-indestructible torrent website. There’s definitely a war going on. As one Twitter member, Jeff Stone, tweeted, “Starting next month AT&T will block access to someone's most visited sites if they downloaded copyrighted content.” The story seems to be true.

But regardless of whether you think illegal downloads are okay or whether you think they are just plain wrong, one must take note of the fact that we can learn a lesson from the Pirates of Pirate Bay.

When the site went down due to a government “attack” on the company’s hosting servers, the “Pirates” went to work to get it back up as quickly as possible. And they were successful. With a backup plan in place, Pirate Bay fans were not out of contact with the site for long as it took less than two days to get the site back up to full speed. If everything on your site just disappeared, how long would it take you to start over again?

These are the things we need to think about when it comes to Internet downtime. If something were to happen to your Internet host, how long would it take you to get your business back up and running? Keeping backup files of your site is crucial, as is a contingency plan for moving those files to another server or web host should it be necessary.

Now you may not have a site like Pirate Bay. No one may be out to get you. The fact of the matter is, however, that we are all at risk of website downtime. Alertra customers know when their sites go down. This allows you to look into the reason for the downtime and take appropriate measures. However, knowing your site is down and having backup copies of your site is only part of the battle. You need to have a plan in place to get your site back up and running as quickly as possible.

Pirates may not be the best example in terms of morality, but in the case of handling a server outage (or shut down), there is definitely a lesson to be learned from them.