They will also be needed to redirect users who visit the blocked sites to another page that details why they are inaccessible to be able to learn what is going on. The judge expects them to execute such through DNS blocking, internet provider (IP) address blocking (or IP re-routing), URL blocking. All of them must be able to ban the torrent sites in question before the coming year. The ISPs expected to comply include Telstra, Optus, TPG and iiNet. It has been a while since they were shut down though, but they still show no sign of life. This led the judge to ban them anyway as there is still a possibility of them being able to going online again. ![]() However, the likes of SolarMovie, Torrentz and TorrentHound have all been taken down before the decision was made. Justice John Nicholas of the Federal Court ruled that all of these will be blocked in the land down under. The ones in the line of fire includes IsoHunt, Torrentz, TorrentHound and streaming service SolarMovie and other mirror and proxy versions of these sites, affiliated or not. ![]() Several rightsholders including Disney, 20th Century Fox, Paramount, Columbia, Roadshow Films and Foxtel requested for local ISPs to block The Pirate Bay and other sites. It looks like The Pirate Bay will no longer be accessible to torrent fans in Australia by next year as internet service providers (ISPs) in the region have been ordered to block the site by the end of the year. The homepage of The Pirate Bay torrent site | Wikimedia Commons/The Pirate Bay
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