It's been two months since governments in the Netherlands and UK ordered ISPs to block BitTorrent search engine The Pirate Bay. Now, the service providers have revealed that the block has done very little to reduce the amount of peer-to-peer (P2P) traffic on their networks. TorrentFreak cites major Dutch ISP XS4All as saying BitTorrent traffic actually went up after the block. rather than down. UPC, another major ISP in the Netherlands, says that although there was a slight traffic decrease immediately after the ban, traffic quickly returned to regular levels. Two further ISPs, KPN and Ziggo, agreed that banning The Pirate Bay has little affect on P2P traffic as a whole.

"Volumes are already pretty much back to where they were before."

In the UK, BBC News spoke with a source from a "major ISP" who echoed the Dutch findings. "We saw a fall at the time of the block," the unnamed source said, "but volumes are already pretty much back to where they were before." The British Recorded Music Industry (BPI), a trade organization funded by the majority of the UK's major and independent record labels, says the failure of The Pirate Bay block will not prevent it from pursuing similar action in the future. Geoff Taylor, the organization's chief executive, told BBC News that the BPI would "take further steps to deal with illegal sites that line their pockets by ripping off everyone who makes the music we enjoy." Given the apparent lack of efficacy of the initial ban, we doubt torrent fans are quaking in their boots at the prospect of further action.