Here we go again. Notorious torrenting portal The Pirate Bay is getting blocked in the Netherlands yet another time.

A court in the Hague has ordered Dutch internet service providers Ziggo and Xs4all to cut all access to The Pirate Bay within the next 10 days, local news outlet Tweakers reports. The blockage must in all cases remain active at least until the Supreme Court reaches a decision.

The ruling overturns an earlier decision dating back to 2014, which concluded there is little merit to IP blocks in the battle against piracy. Failing to comply with this request will result in a €10,000 penalty, with the possibility of €2,000 in additional fines for each day the providers continue to violate the restriction.

This turn of events marks yet another concerning decision in a string of rulings ordering internet providers to shut down access to popular torrent sites.

Earlier in February, a court in Sweden reached a similar decision, ordering a local internet provider to block The Pirate Bay for the next three years following copyright violation claims.

Then later in June, the European Union Court of Justice ruled that internet providers are obligated to restrict access to The Pirate Bay at the request of copyright holders.

Ironically, the ruling comes only a day after reports surfaced that the European Union commissioned a 300-page study to measure the impact piracy has on sales of copyrighted materials, and then attempted to bury it once the findings couldn’t breed any evidence to suggest any harmful effect.

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