Famous last words discography tpb. The pirate bay dares kanye west to sue it as the life of pablo tops torrent charts. Depeche mode discography at discogs. Indexed torrent files, which contained the information. Including more than 40 music albums in MP3 format. Depeche Mode, Eminem, Katy Perry, Lady.
The Pirate Bay has suffered quite a bit of downtime over the past several years, but in recent weeks a more alarming pattern has begun to emerge. While many people can assess the site, at the time of writing there are also millions of visitors instead of the iconic pirate ship logo. Luckily for them, there is no shortage of workarounds. Accessing TPB through proxies, its Tor domain, or the site VPN server still works.
But, if a problem like this has lasted for weeks, there’s clearly something wrong. According to various traffic tracking websites, direct visits to The Pirate Bay are, with Similarweb estimating a drop of more than last month alone. The Pirate Bay is aware of the issues but it doesn’t have a definite answer either. This means that, like many others, we can only speculate. From our experience with various outages, there are a few options that can be easily ruled out. For one, this is not the result of a consumer ISP blocking access. The problems are worldwide, occurring in the US, Europe, Latin America and elsewhere.
There is no clear location-based pattern. The site’s domain name is working just fine too and the same is true for its DNS. The correct address is being resolved, even from locations where the site is inaccessible. Many people have been pointing out Cloudflare as the culprit, suggesting the company is willingly blocking TPB. This doesn’t seem likely either. Why would Cloudflare block a site in a few places scattered around the world, and make it appear as if they can’t connect to it?
Since The Pirate Bay itself has no idea what’s happening, the problem doesn’t seem to be on their end either. So what’s going on then? One option that’s left is that an network is somehow causing trouble. These are the providers which make sure that traffic is routed from your ISP connection, through their infrastructure, to The Pirate Bay. If one of these networks is not passing on traffic to The Pirate Bay, Cloudflare can’t connect to it, at least not everywhere. This could also explain why the site is unreachable in some locations while working just fine in others.
Something similar happened last year when backbone provider The Pirate Bay and other pirate sites. In that case, Cogent actually blocked Cloudflare’s IP-addresses. It’s a possible explanation but, in this case, we haven’t been able to trace the issues to a specific backbone network. This means that, for now, the mystery remains.
I'll be downloading it tonight. And then in 7 weeks time I'll finally be able to buy it as well. Already one track from their forthcoming album has apparently leaked onto the net, although there has been some debate amongst fans about whether it can be the final mix or not - never a good sign. There is something peculiar about Depeche Mode fans and their need to do DIY remixes of everything the band produce.
The press releases to accompany the 'Remixes 81 > 04' album virtually claimed that Depeche Mode single-handedly inspired remix culture, and I was guilty myself back in the day. Mojo master winamp visualizer. I can remember massacring 'Master & Servant' armed only with the commercially available mixes on vinyl and a couple of tape decks. Already there are fan remixes of leaked track 'Fragile Tension' doing the rounds, and a search on a torrent site will produce a couple of Depeche Mode albums apparently from 2009, which are in fact just homebrew mixes of old material rendered as compilation albums. I haven't heard the full track yet, it doesn't hit radio in the UK until Monday, I've just seen some of the clips the band have released of them in the studio and heard the introduction to the track that was played at the Berlin press conference for their upcoming tour.
The title is funny though - 'Wrong'. It rather recalls the post-Alan Wilder 90s when they were releasing singles like 'It's No Good' and 'Useless', which some people rather cruelly suggested were more like descriptions of the tracks themselves than titles.