Defence attorneys in the Pirate Bay copyright trial hold a T-shirt reading 'The Battle has Begun' following the closing arguments at city court in Stockholm March 3, 2009. Pirate Bay co-founders Peter Sunde, Gottfrid Svartholm, Fredrik Neij and
Defence attorneys in the Pirate Bay copyright trial hold a T-shirt reading 'The Battle has Begun' following the closing arguments at city court in Stockholm March 3, 2009. Pirate Bay co-founders Peter Sunde, Gottfrid Svartholm, Fredrik Neij and Carl Lundstrom have been charged by a Swedish prosecutor with conspiracy to break copyright law and being an accessory. REUTERS/Bob Strong REUTERS/Bob Strong

The AES code, that is visible on The Pirate Bay's page, has been cracked. It has been on the page for over a month now and a Reddit user finally decrypted the code. The code is not a secret message for the world, but a link to a YouTube video. The video is of Arnold Schwarzenegger's famous line from "Terminator" - "I'll be back." Can the users of TPB hope that the largest file-sharing website will be back soon?

The Pirate Bay disappeared from the internet in 2014 and it was due to a raid conducted by Swedish Police in a nuclear data centre in Nacka in Stockholm. Apart from The Pirate Bay, various other websites went offline.

However, The Pirate Bay website showed signs of life after it appeared with a huge waving pirate flag and a code. The code was mysterious as users and techies tried their best to make some sense out of it or crack it. A Reddit user by the name - dafky2000 posted a YouTube link and stated that he cracked it.

"Bahahahahah!!! I got it! I believe I'm the first! No one else has posted yet so yay for me! I guess all I need was a good night's sleep :),"dafky2000 wrote on Reddit.

Dafky2000 also talked to TorrentFreak about decrypting the code on The Pirate Bay website.

"By analyzing the page source code I could see some irrelevant HTML tags that had no effect. In particular, 'key lowercase' with the text enclosed 'WeAreTPB', which was not in fact lowercase. The encryption technology was the name of the image itself - 'aes.png' - AES," dafky2000 said to TorrentFreak.

The user accepted that he faced some problems while cracking the code and he was "decrypting half the URL" and knew that he "was on the right track."

Check out the video below. Share in the comments section if this can be a sign of The Pirate Bay's return.

Credit: YouTube/Clip Nation

For questions/comments regarding the article, you may email the writer at t.mazumdar@ibtimes.com.au.