Accessing copyrighted content via torrents remains illegal in many regions and can lead to ISP warnings or legal action. ⚡ Notable Release Groups
The official extratorrent.cc domain is permanently offline and has been since May 2017. Rights holders, industry groups, and governments argued that
Legal and ethical controversies The success of Extratorrent and similar sites made them targets for copyright enforcement and legal action. Rights holders, industry groups, and governments argued that torrent indexes facilitated large‑scale copyright infringement by making it easy to find and download copyrighted works. Legal pressure included domain seizures, litigation threats, and actions against associated services (hosting providers, advertisers, and payment processors). Even where index sites argued they merely provided links and did not host infringing content, courts and anti‑piracy coalitions often considered them contributory facilitators. The ethical debate around such sites was complex: proponents emphasized access to information, decentralized sharing, and resistance to monopolistic distribution channels; critics highlighted harm to creators, lost revenue, and risks from malware-laden or low-quality copies. The ethical debate around such sites was complex: