Torrent-sharing sites like Sweden’s the Pirate Bay provide users a forum in which they can freely upload and quickly download illegal rips of movies, music, and software, among other data. Naturally, this makes them a bit of a punching bag for the industries that make money off of such things, and they frequently find themselves on the wrong side of the aisle in legal matters regarding intellectual property.

But the Pirate Bay, perhaps emboldened by the recent release of the documentary TPB AFK, plans to flip the court transcript on a Finnish anti-piracy organization and has announced its intention to sue the Copyright Information and Anti-Piracy Centre for — wait for it — copyright infringement. The CIAPC recently redesigned their website’s front page to mimic TPB’s, down to their rival’s trademark pirate ship, shown sinking.

“We are outraged by this behavior,” a spokespirate told TorrentFreak. “People must understand what is right and wrong. Stealing material like this on the Internet is a threat to economies worldwide.” That’s an accusation oft-leveled at TPB. “We feel that we must make a statement and therefore we will sure them for copyright infringement. If not even IFPI and their friends can respect copyright, perhaps it’s time to move on?”

The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry is a music lobby group that teamed up with the CIAPC to sue the Pirate Bay in Finland in 2011. The CIAPC made international headlines in November when they raided the home of a 9-year-old girl who’d shared an album via TPB. Police famously confiscated her Winnie the Pooh laptop and her father ultimately had to settle by paying the Finnish group 300 Euros.