And if you look hard enough today, deep in the un-indexed corners of archive.org , you can still find a .rar file from 2005, uploaded by "Anonymous," timestamped November 12th, with a readme that says: "Preserve this. They won't."
While The Pirate Bay was fending off lawsuits in Sweden, the Internet Archive operated out of the Presidio of San Francisco with a noble mission. Most ISPs and university network administrators didn’t block archive.org because it hosted presidential speeches and Grateful Dead soundboards. But lurking in the subdirectories were digital treasures that copyright lawyers would weep over. In 2005, the user interface of the Internet Archive was spartan—mostly raw directory listings, FTP links, and simple HTML tables. For a pirate, this was paradise. internet archive pirates 2005
Because the Archive offered and unmetered bandwidth (paid for by grants and donations), it became the perfect CDN for piracy. A user on a forum like Reddit (founded that same year) or Something Awful would post a direct link to an Archive file. The download would max out a T1 line, and the Archive footed the bill. And if you look hard enough today, deep