BitTorrent indexing site The Pirate Bay, whose servers were raided by the Swedish police on Tuesday, was still down as of early Wednesday. And one of the site's cofounders, Peter Sunde, doesn't care if it ever comes back.

In a blog post, Sunde — who claims he has nothing to do with the site's operations nowadays — claims the ethos of The Pirate Bay has changed, and that its current owners don't share the same ideals as its founders.

"The Pirate Bay has been raided, again. That happened over eight years ago last time. That time, a lot of people went out to protest, and rally in the streets. Today few seem to care. And I’m one of them," he wrote.

Sunde, along with his three cofounders of The Pirate Bay, was charged with copyright infringement and sentenced to one year in jail in 2009. Together, with The Pirate Bay cofounder Fredrik Neij, he launched a legal sharing site BayFiles in 2011, but that closed down in November 2014. Sunde also announced that he will run for a position in the European Parliament with the European Pirate Party in May 2014.

Today, according to Sunde, The Pirate Bay is run by "less soul-ish people" who added "more and more ads" to the site, and threw a lavish party in its honor.

"It feels good that it might have closed down forever, just a real shame the way it did that," he wrote.