Pirate Pay


Pirate Pay is a software toolset used in the copy protection and content management of torrents, for authors and publishers. Pirate Pay operates on the Japanese, Russian and Indian markets. Eighty-five percent of Pirate Pay clients come from outside Russia. Pirate Pay technology blocks approximately 5 million illegal downloads per month, processing about 1500 torrent-seeds. According to Dasreda, this translates into around $8 million of savings for copyright holders. Pirate Pay is widely used around the world.

History

Pirate Pay was first presented at a second start-up tour in the city of Perm in April 2010-2011. The founders were brothers Andrei and Alexei Klimenko, along with their friend Dmitry Shuvaev, established the Limited Liability Company called "Internet Content." The initial investment of $34,000 was furnished by the brothers, who retain ownership of the firm.

2010

Pirate Pay participated in three competitions:
  • Finalists at BIT 2010.
  • Won "Best Business Model" in a competition for technology start-ups organized by the CRFD fund.
  • Won a grant at a competition at the "Higher School of Economics".

2011

2012

  • The company received Skolkovo resident status and received a grant of $1.2 million.
  • Pirate Pay established a partnership with Japanese company Unidam.

2013

  • In the spring of 2013, Pirate Pay received $68,000 from the program “START-2”.

Technical details

Pirate Pay works with info-hashes of content in worldwide Peer-to-peer network. It does not remove links and deals without interaction with torrent sites, link aggregators and search engines. Protection of content from illegal distribution can be started with only the title. Thousands of code strings operate without human intervention to detect the required title name in file sharing swarms. It is directly placed on protection and executes all necessary actions to prevent content downloading by leeches and uploading by seeders. Pirate Pay operates with the technology of first uploader search in the swarm, finding the first infringer for offline legal activities.

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