Per Parent Herald, owners of TPB are reportedly unafraid of going back to prison. The owners are not shutting down the site as they have taken ample measures to protect their business.

To recall, TPB co-founder Fredrik Neij was handed down a 10-month sentence back in 2012 for his involvement with the torrent site and enabling copyright infringement, per The Guardian.

From Sweden, Neij fled to Thailand but was eventually tracked down by Thai officials in Nov. 2014. Neij, who operates under the alias TiAMO, was released on June 1, 2015, after serving two-thirds of his 10-month sentence.

Peter Sunde, another TPB co-founder, was released in Nov. 2014 after serving five months. Meanwhile, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg is still serving a 42-month prison sentence in Denmark due to unrelated computer crimes. He has already served his time for his connection with TPB.

Sunde has seemingly disconnected himself from TPB but Neij has bigger plans. The report added that the 37-year-old plans to appeal to the Swedish government’s confiscation of TPB’s domain name.

Lawyers familiar with the matter said that the case may end up in the European court of justice soon. Several laws have to be cleared up to determine whether or not TPB is indeed breaking the law on copyright infringement.

TPB’s courageous move come in amid the turmoil that has surrounded torrent websites. Similar businesses like Torrent Hound, KickassTorrents and Torrentz.eu have closed down operations due to declining web traffic, poor revenues and threats from police.

In a move to assure its users that TPB is going to stay, they released a cleaner version of the site. The said site is now porn-less according to a developer.

“Since TPB is now the biggest torrent site again, I figured there might be people with similar feelings toward adult content that would appreciate a clean version of the bay,” the TPBClean developer said.