Howto access the Pirate Bay if you’re on Virgin Media, Sky, BT, TalkTalk, Be, Plusnet, O2, Orange or T-Mobile
Thursday, May 3rd, 2012As you may have noticed, Virgin Media, Sky, TalkTalk, Virgin Media, O2, Be, Plusnet, Post Office broadband, Orange and T-Mobile and others, just started blocking The Pirate Bay.
Unfortunately, now the proxies are being threatened – this may be a time to take a look at http://www.pirateparty.org.uk/help and see whether you are able assist.
There are various ways to bypass the block, but let’s start with the easiest way to get around your ISPs blocking – here are some links to some very simple proxies and mirrors you can use to get on the site:
More mirrors and ways to access it here:
How to setup a proxy for a website like the Pirate Bay
Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012You may have read recently about attempts to block the Pirate Bay.
There are a variety of reasons I think this is a bad idea, perhaps I’ll write a post about it, but this is simply about how to quickly and easily deploy a web proxy for a specific website which could be anywhere in the world.
This is REALLY quick and simple. Let’s go!
1) Go to LowEndBox.com and buy a cheap VM of your choice.
- The more exotic the location the better, though even the UK should work.
- The specification doesn’t matter, though 128MB of RAM or more will be best.
- Don’t accept anything with less 15GB monthly bandwidth
- I’d expect, even at peak, your proxy to use less that 500MB/month – well within most limits.
- Be aware of your provider’s T’s & C’s. They may not like you.
NOTE: For other uses, I’d recommend networks with more reliable reputations than simply “is cheap” – ability to reimage, console access, awesome support – this time none of those are required.
2) Request Debian Squeeze or Ubuntu Lucid 10.04 as the server OS
- You could use other things, we’re going to use Debuntu.
3) Login as root. If you’re not root, you can always “sudo -s” for root.
Let’s update the machine and install the nginx – the program that we’re going to be using.
- apt-get update
- apt-get dist-upgrade -y
- apt-get install nginx -y
4) Let’s configure your DNS before we go further. I’m assuming you have a domain – yourdomain.com. Go to your domain’s DNS records and create an “A” record called tpb.yourdomain.com, with your server’s IP address as the details. The TTL doesn’t matter, but generally you’ll prefer smaller to larger. Save that, and let’s get back to the server!
5 ) Let’s configure nginx:
- nano /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/tpb.config
- Paste in :
server {
listen THESERVERSIPADDRESS:80; server_name tpb.yourdomain.com;
location / {
proxy_passĀ http://thepiratebay.se/;
}
access_log /dev/null;
error_logĀ /dev/null;
}
Obviously, you’ll need to change tpb.yourdomain.com and YOURSERVERSIPADDRESS to what they actually are.
To save this, type ctrl-o, *enter* ctrl-x.
6) You can now configure SSL if you want, or leave it unconfigured as it is. I’m not going to cover this here, right now, but it’s a nice touch.
7) Run:
- /etc/init.d/nginx restart
Hopefully nginx should restart without errors. If there are errors, look at them carefully and try and understand where you might need to go back to.
Go to tpb.yourdomain.com – hopefully your DNS changes will have been noticed by now and that should work nicely.
9) Publicise your URL to your friends and family.
10) Introduce someone else to these instructions.