The world’s most famous torrent website, the Pirate Bay, is continuing it’s forced "world tour" and has moved for the fourth time in a week. The site popped-up in Guyana a day after Peru suspended the site’s domain name without prior notice.

The Pirate Bay (TPB) said that the .PE domain was barred on Wednesday, without prior warning from officials. Now the website can be found at thepiratebay.gy, a Guyana based .GY country code top-level domain (ccTLD).



Peru’s National Institute for the Defense of Competition and Protection of Intellectual Property (Indecopi) has ordered the ban on the domain, saying "The use of thepiratebay.pe domain can help users avoid infringement by connecting, sharing files and downloading files," according to El Comercio.

In case the small South American country decides to shut down TPB’s activities, the company claims they have plenty of countries to relocate to.



“We have some 70 domain names left, so eventually we will find one that sticks,” a Pirate Bay insider told TorrentFreak. “A few domains have been prepared so we can switch over whenever’s needed.”

Pirate Bay Moves to Guyana After Domain Suspension, 70 Domains to Go: The Pirate Bay has set sail to a new dom... http://t.co/MDtvqYdzSj — The Pirate Bay (@tpb) December 18, 2013

Before moving to Peru the torrent site was forced to briefly use the services of Ascension Island's .AC, territory controlled by the UK government. Stringent supporter of copyrights laws, moving to a British territory was a temporary solution, following last week’s Pirate Bay's .SX domain seizure, forced by the Dutch anti-piracy group BREIN.

The group sent a letter to The Pirate Bay's owners, claiming that "by registering domain names and using these and/or allowing these to be used" they "infringe on the rights of Rights Owners" and can be held "liable for the damages that they have suffered."

As the site is trying to stay operational, the new .gy address is the sixth one used by The Pirate Bay this year. The torrent site since April moved from Greenland to Iceland to Saint Maarten.



Last week TorrentFreak learned that The Pirate Bay group is currently developing PirateBrowser software, which will make URLs and domains irrelevant when accessing the website. The group claimed that by their actions the entertainment industry "finally brought on the next generation of decentralised services.”



In the meantime TPB visitors statistics showed a 15 percent decline in active users, TorrentFreak reports, adding that an estimated 10 percent of visits are done through proxies. Those users who aren't sure about the current domain name of the Pirate Bay can access it via 194.71.107.80 IP address or “just Google it.”



Social media has exploded with comments following yet another move by the TPB.

Most have condemned Peru’s actions. “Shame on Perú,” Jose Mulero Esw posted.

Managing Director at Smart Digital Solution in Thailand, Anan Michael Wu commented on Facebook saying:



Ashley Cooper on the other hand believes that the domain will soon move again. “Pirate bay.co.com.org.UK.nz.au.net.biz.ru coming soon,” she posted. Some like Franky McFly, had a simple message, “God save the pirate bay!!”

Meanwhile TPB co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm Warg has appeared in closed-door court hearing over charges of hacking into Danish government databases. Warg is facing 6 years’ prison term for his role in breaking into the Danish social security database, driver’s license database, and the shared IT system used in the Schengen zone. Warg’s custody was extended to January 8, 2014.