On the other hand, it's great job security for them, knowing that what they've been asked to do is temporary and they'll be needed to do it again soon.
Criminals keep doing crime, we may as well stop all police efforts.
I mean, say what you will about the morality of running a website dedicated to torrenting films and pornography, but policing will always be a game of whack-a-mole.
Yeah but blocking domain names is just pointless. They should go after the guys who run the site, or other things. I'm sure they can find way more effective means to stop pirate sites
It does take time and effort to find the new one though, and if that isn't enough to dissuade continued piracy, there are plenty of impostors that always arise serving fake files and real malware that act as a follow-on deterrent.
Nothing's going to stop a teenager with no income and unlimited time from seeking out the new iteration, but when it's easy and obvious enough for my tech-illiterate and impatient mother-in-law to pirate movies, any action taken to rock the boat (domain seizures, C&Ds to subscribers, etc.) does have an impact.
In the future there will be legal file sharing paid by crypto currencies. There will be a distributed movie Netflix like app running on p2p tech like ipfs where streams are paid on the block chain.
If Hollywood resists then Chinese will debute the tech.
In future, blockchain will do everything we do today, but less efficient and more expensive. And people will rejoice, and say "How did we ever do without this?"
30 minutes and $10 domain registration later: Pirate bay: We've migrated to our new domain, take this one and we'll buy another...