The Pirate Bay, a longtime file-sharing site best known for the controversy that it has created, may be back live come Feb. 1 after being shuttered by Swedish police and criminal prosecutors for copyright infringement as 2014 came to a close.

A countdown clock on its website indicates its return but provides no other insight. The timer is set to end at 1 a.m. EST on Feb. 1.

As the supposed arrival looms, it's a good time to take a look back at the history of The Pirate Bay since it came into play over a decade ago.

September 2003

This is where it all began. In September 2003, The Pirate Bay was created by a Swedish anti-copyright organization called Piratbyrån. Political activists and hackers formed Piratbyrån earlier in 2003.

October 2004

The Pirate Bay begins running as a separate organization starting in October of 2004. The first people to run it were Gottfrid Svartholm and Frederik Neij, who have both since been accused and charged with "assisting in making copyrighted content available" by the Motion Picture Association of America.

By this time, the file tracker was tracking around 60,000 torrent files and had around a million users.

July 2005

The Pirate Bay was redesigned and relaunched in multiple languages during July 2005 to accommodate the 80 percent of the site's users who were not Scandinavians. By the end of 2005, 2.5 million peers were using the site. The word "peers" here refers to the number of instances of a Pirate Bay torrent being tracked.

May 31, 2006

In May of 2006, around 65 police, who took away the servers of the site and caused the site to be down for three days, raided The Pirate Bay's headquarters in Stockholm. This raid was ordered by Judge Tomas Norström, who was later the presiding judge for the 2009 trial.

The raid may have caused the site to be down for three days, but it also led to international press, creating a massive traffic spike for the website after it came back online three days later.

April 17, 2009

The website had been involved with a number of lawsuits by this time, such as in 2007 when The Pirate Bay sued anti-piracy company MediaDefender for allegedly hiring hackers to perform distributed denial of service attacks on The Pirate Bay. On April 17, 2009, Peter Sunde, who was another co-creator of the site, along with Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm and Carl Lundström, were found guilty of assisting copyright infringement. The four were sentenced to one year each in prison and a fine of 30 million Swedish Krona, which was around $4.2 million U.S. dollars.

During an appeal in 2010, the prison sentences were reduced, but the fines were increased to over $6.5 million. None of those charged remain involved with The Pirate Bay.

December 2014

On Sept. 8, 2014, apps that had "The Pirate Bay" in the title were removed by Google from the Google Play Store. It is unknown if this was because of the events that would take place the next day, or if it was simply a coincidence.

Just one day later, the site headquarters were raided once again by Swedish police, along with a number of other torrent websites.

While a number of Pirate Bay copy-cat sites have been created since then, the real, full version of The Pirate Bay has not yet resurfaced. However, a timer has been posted to the site's home page, presumably relating to the return of the site.

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