It's simply not that easy to take The Pirate Bay down.

On Saturday, Jan. 31, just a day before the supposed comeback of the world's biggest torrent website, The Pirate Bay roused itself from the dead, and it seems by most accounts working like the old Pirate Bay before it was ransacked nearly two months ago.

However, instead of the traditional pirate ship logo that sailed on the face of the old Pirate Bay website, the resurrected Pirate Bay features a phoenix to represent its new lease on life. It's unclear if the phoenix is a temporary fixture or if it will be the site's new logo from here on.

Last month, Swedish police confirmed that it had indeed carried out a raid against The Pirate Bay's nuclear-proof data center built into a mountain range at the Nacka station near Stockholm. On Dec. 9, The Pirate Bay went dark as authorities seized servers and other computer equipment, essentially killing off the torrent website for seven weeks.

On Dec. 15, The Pirate Bay made its first and last official statement about the raid through Mr. 1010010000, one of its moderators, who told TorrentFreak that if the website resurfaces, "it'll be with a bang."

Earlier this month, The Pirate Bay started showing a countdown timer on its official domain, thepiratebay.se, indicating that it plans to make a comeback on Feb. 1.

A day ahead of schedule, The Pirate Bay fulfills its promise and seems to be serving up the same millions of torrents that were available before the raid, with the newest files dated Dec. 9, the same day The Pirate Bay's servers were confiscated.

The website looks and feels familiar, although it's for now devoid of ads and clicking on links such as "Contact Us" and "RSS" brings up a 404 error. It's also not possible to register, though The Pirate Bay is expected to fix that up soon.

One major change, however, is the absence of the Suprbay forums, which will reportedly be launched in another resurrection of The Pirate Bay by many of the site's former admins and moderators who, according to TorrentFreak, have risen up in mutiny as some of The Pirate Bay's staff decided to relaunch a trimmed down version that blocked access to admins and moderators.

"I wish I had better news to come with. The launch that is about to take place on February 1st is not us," said one lead admin speaking under the name WTC-SWE, clearly incensed at the treatment he and other staff had been getting. "It was until some dickhead decided to take TPB crew out of the picture. He thinks a site can be run without any staff at all and at the same time keeping up with fakes, internal issues, etc."

WTC-SWE adds that "the real TPB will be back with proper staff and all." He and other staff in open revolt have access to a backup of The Pirate Bay's content that was moved to the cloud hosted by several different providers in 2012, following a tipoff about a possible raid.

To make matters more complicated, a number of copycats have cropped up following the official Pirate Bay's shutting down. Isohunt.to, which has millions of visitors each day, has come up with the Old Pirate Bay and is paying developers $100,000 to keep the site up to snuff. Others, such as thepiratebay.cr and thepiratebay.ee, are simply not connected to the official site and are charging users fees to access torrents.

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