When The Pirate Bay was raided by police in 2006 they confiscated the site's servers. Now one of those servers has been bought by a Swedish museum, which will display the machine as a device that has impacted people's lives. In another development, damning CAM footage of the upcoming TPB movie has leaked showing the crew calculating their huge earnings.

The big question today is just how many Pirate Bay articles can we get out before our heads explode? Answer: We don’t know, but we’ll keep trying – hopefully our brains will be intact to deliver the trial verdict tomorrow.

In the meantime, according to a report, one of the servers originally confiscated by the police in the 2006 Pirate Bay raid is set to become a museum piece.

Sweden’s National Museum of Science and Technology has announced it has bought the server for 2,000 kronor ($243). It will be displayed in a section of the museum dedicated to machines and inventions that have changed people’s lives.

Pirate Bay’s ‘museum’ server

In other Pirate Bay news, film director and producer Simon Klose previously announced he was making a documentary about the site entitled “TPB-AFK”. The movie, which is being made by Klose from a fly-on-the-wall perspective, is scheduled to be finished in five years. When it’s released, Klose hopes that it will be heavily pirated but of course, pirates don’t operate on other people’s release schedules.

Impatient at having to wait years for a release, someone sneaked a CAM into an early screening and released the footage onto the Internet. The damning footage, which shows the crew working out how much money they have earned from the site, is available below.

More Pirate Bay updates as we get them…