After the infamous raid on the Pirate Bay servers in December that rendered the torrent site inaccessible for more than two months the Swedish authorities is going one step further by pushing a legislation that would completely shut down ThePirateBay.se and PirateBay.se.
Prosecutor Fredrik Ingblad, the same man behind the raid on Pirate Bay's server is the one heading the initiative and targets the .SE domain used by the torrent indexer.
Technically, a website can still exist without the help of a top-level domain name. However, using a domain like .SE which Pirate Bay is using will give the website an official identity and make them accessible and easy to find. Top-level domains are considered a vital structure in operating a mainstream website.
The lawsuit was filed on 2013 at the District Court of Stockholm and targets Punkt SE, the organization responsible for regulating Sweden's top-level domain, according to International Business Times.
According to arguments presented by Ingblad, the domain name is essentially part of the website and acts as accessory to whatever crime the website commits. Inglbad added that Punkt SE should cease registering domains and as much as possible should be place under government control.
Ingblad said, "It is not our intention to impose any monitoring responsibility on Punkt SE. the best outcome is that the state takes over the domain."
In response to these legal actions Punkt SE member Maria Ekelund told Torrent Freak, "There have been two legal cases regarding forfeiture of domain names from the domain name holder (ikonm.se and [torrent site] xnt.nu. In the Pirate bay case the prosecutor wants to forfeit the domain names directly from .SE."
Additional reports said that the case will be reopened after two years and will the trial will start at the end of April.