The Pirate Bay Is Mining Cryptocurrency Through Your Browser To Get Rid Of Junk Advertisements

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The popular online torrent website, The Pirate Bay has been caught using its users’ browsers to mine Monero as browser-based mining ads take the center stage.

Visitors to The Pirate Bay have discovered JavaScript code in the website that ‘borrows’ your processor to mine Monero digital coins.

The site told TorrentFreak that it was testing the feature for about 24 hours as a new way of generating revenue and that it could eventually be enough to replace ads. In short, don’t be surprised if this becomes a mainstay of the site going forward. However, users have found that they can block the miner through their browser settings or add-ons like ad blockers, so it’s not inescapable.

Cryptocurrencies use a lot of processing power GPU or CPU to run a complex hashing algorithm to find a unique string of letters and numbers. Those who do the processing are rewarded for successfully cracking the hash.

TPB is in hot water after a “typo” in the miner code was causing the software to use almost all of the user’s CPU power instead of the intended 20-30 percent; but this has since been corrected, according to a TPB blog post.

“We really want to get rid of all the ads,” the admins wrote. “But we also need enough money to keep the site running.”

Some users of the piracy site are complaining that the system is malware and acts like a botnet, dubbing the process malvertising because it doesn’t seek a user’s consent to do the javascript-based mining. Securelist a popular infosec community website, stated examples of how browser-based mining has been used maliciously, like Tidbit, which offered a web service to mine Bitcoins. Instead of displaying advertisements, webmasters could include Tidbit’s scripts in their websites to earn money via Bitcoin mining. However, the service founders were served a subpoena by the New Jersey Attorney General’s office because they used the users’ computing power without their consent. They finally reached a settlement and had to abandon their project when it was deemed “illegal.”

While it’s true that mining can be used in malicious advertisements around the Web, and on occasion they can also act as trojans, it can also be a legitimate business isolated only to when you have the browser on a specific site deploying the technology.

The Pirate Bay is using the service Coin Hive which according to this writer’s knowledge hasn’t been linked to any malicious activity at the time of this report. Although, some would argue its script is malicious by using your CPU power to mine, depending on how you feel about the overall process.

Threads on the popular website Reddit suggested that The Pirate Bay users were not happy about the miner, with several users complaining that the website enabled the miner “without explicit knowledge or authorization of users.”

If you want to block the mining it’s as simple as installing an ad-blocking software and blacklisting the Coin Hive URL. But if everyone does this and it gets widely adopted then sites won’t get their revenue. So is it really a big deal that websites get to use 20-30% of your computing power while you have them open in a browser window as long as the software doesn’t permanently install malicious software onto your system? It’s a much better solution than crappy advertisements that sometimes contain malware. Let us know what you think in the comment section below!

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